Philippine Daily Inquirer

Augmented Paper with smart pen: Your next to-lust-for gadget

Montblanc–with its new concept store at Rustan’s–now has the best of both worlds: heritage and digital

- By Cheche V. Moral @missyrabul

Luxury company Montblanc, makers of writing instrument­s and Swiss mechanical watches, has broken into the digital product territory, but its makers don’t see this to hurt the heritage products it’s known for.

“We don’t see any conflict,” Matthieu Dupont, president of Montblanc Southeast Asia, told Inquirer Lifestyle Tuesday, at the unveiling of the brand’s new and expanded concept store at Rustan’s Makati.

He was referring to recent launches of the brand that included smart watches and the so-called Augmented Paper and “smart pen” set, which was previewed by Rustan’s guests that evening.

“The fact that you have a technologi­cal element to a product such as Augmented Paper is in line with maybe a different audience, or the same audience who’s after a separate product. That doesn’t mean [when you have one], you can’t have the other,” he said.

Sold out

Augmented Paper is a gadget that allows the user to write or sketch longhand on paper with a smart pen—a Montblanc Star Walker—and it transfers the writings to one’s digital device with a press of a button.

It sold out in Singapore when it launched and now has a three-month wait list. (Orders from the Rustan’s event are estimated to be delivered by December, pending local patent registrati­on. It retails for about SG$1,000.)

“There’s beauty and soul to writing things by hand,” Dupont added. “That doesn’t change. Let’s not forget that Augmented Paper is still a writing instrument. It only means that it combines the best of both worlds, because you can transfer what you write to a digital object. We are able to do that because Montblanc has such a strong heritage in writing instrument­s. Not anybody can just come up with that product.”

Smart watch

Last month, it launched the Montblanc Summit smart watches in Singapore and the “reaction was very good, we’re pretty much sold out,” he said. At SG$1,300, the Summit is priced way below the typical Montblanc mechanical watch.

“Smart and mechanical are two different things, but they’re not incompatib­le,” he pointed out. “It’s for a different clientele—young, very connected, likes to travel. Maybe you can wear your smart watch in the day and the mechanical watch in the evening. One keeps you informed, the other is about the beauty of craftsmans­hip.”

He sees the Summit as a sort of entry-level to the world of Montblanc Swiss watches. “We’re seeing our younger audience thinking, ‘Now I’ve had my Summit, I want to move on to a mechanical piece.’”

Dupont and his regional sales team were also here this week to launch Montblanc’s special collaborat­ion with Unicef in support of its child literacy program. This is the 13th year of Montblanc’s initiative, which has already raised over $10 million for the education of underprivi­leged children in the world. Three percent of the sales of every purchase of a Montblanc x Unicef product will be donated to the project.

Unicef

The goal this year is to raise $1.5 million, earmarked for projects in Brazil, China and Djibouti.

“It’s not about boosting sales in any way, it’s about doing things very well,” Dupont said of the Unicef collaborat­ion. “When a brand does well, it’s also about doing things right and doing good around us. It’s about the message that accompanie­s the product. It’s about our capacity as a top global luxury company to be able to give a message and support projects concerning child literacy. These are limited edition, and they only give us so much.”

The Unicef collection redesigns the iconic Montblanc Meisterstü­ck pen with inscriptio­ns of the first letters children learn to write, in six different languages—Roman, Chinese, Arabic, Japanese, Korean and Hindi. The design is inspired by the Rosetta stone.

Dupont—who has handled IWC and A. Lange &

Sohne, brands that, like Montblanc, are under The Richemont Group luxury conglomera­te—believes Montblanc has a “fantastic propositio­n for modern men and women because it offers the best of European craftsmans­hip.”

Its heritage products, writing instrument­s, are made in an atelier in its Hamburg headquarte­rs. It made its first Meisterstü­ck pen in 1924. The leathergoo­ds are from its workshop in Florence, while the jewelry and accessorie­s are made in France.

Montblanc began making Swiss mechanical watches only in 1997, and has its own atelier in Villeret called Manufactur­e Minerva, founded in 1858 and known for exceptiona­l handmade movements.

Asked if it’s easier for Montblanc to foray into smart watches—a category frowned upon by most luxury Swiss watchmaker­s—because it’s not traditiona­lly known for mechanical watches, Dupont said: “I would actually [buck] that statement. Historical­ly maybe we were known for other segments then. However, if you see the history of Minerva, it has a strong history of watches, chronomete­rs, mechanical timepieces. Today, Montblanc is recognized as a global luxury player. In certain references [for the watches], we can’t supply demand. Whether that growth is lower than leathergoo­ds or something else depends on the market, consumer maturity, and understand­ing of the watch market.”

In the Philippine­s, Montblanc is seeing “growth in watches, continued growth in writing instrument­s, and very, very strong growth in leathergoo­ds… I think it’s a matter of exposing the products in the four collection­s,” he added, which explains the new concept boutique—a sleek, plush design that features walnut wood, copper and lacquered finishing to highlight each product category.

 ??  ?? A guest at the Montblanc-Rustan’s Makati boutique opening tests the Augmented Paper, a gadget that allows one to write or sketch longhand on paper with a smart pen—a Montblanc Star Walker—and then transfers the writings to one’s digital device with a...
A guest at the Montblanc-Rustan’s Makati boutique opening tests the Augmented Paper, a gadget that allows one to write or sketch longhand on paper with a smart pen—a Montblanc Star Walker—and then transfers the writings to one’s digital device with a...
 ??  ?? Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Solitaire fountain pen
Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Solitaire fountain pen
 ??  ?? At the unveiling of the new Montblanc boutique in Rustan’s Makati: SSI president Anton Huang; Katharina Bandelow, assistant officer of the Economic and Commercial Section at the Embassy of Germany in the Philippine­s; Verity Rushton, program specialist...
At the unveiling of the new Montblanc boutique in Rustan’s Makati: SSI president Anton Huang; Katharina Bandelow, assistant officer of the Economic and Commercial Section at the Embassy of Germany in the Philippine­s; Verity Rushton, program specialist...
 ??  ?? The new and expanded Montblanc boutique at Rustan’s Makati Montblanc is located at Rustan’s Makati, Rustan’s Shangri-La Plaza, Rustan’s Cebu, Greenbelt 5, City of Dreams Manila and Newport Mall. Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Solitaire ballpoint...
The new and expanded Montblanc boutique at Rustan’s Makati Montblanc is located at Rustan’s Makati, Rustan’s Shangri-La Plaza, Rustan’s Cebu, Greenbelt 5, City of Dreams Manila and Newport Mall. Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Solitaire ballpoint...
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 ??  ?? Montblanc brand ambassador­s Charlotte Casiraghi and Hugh Jackman at the launch of the Unicef collection in New York
Montblanc brand ambassador­s Charlotte Casiraghi and Hugh Jackman at the launch of the Unicef collection in New York
 ??  ?? Matthieu Dupont, president of Montblanc Southeast Asia
Matthieu Dupont, president of Montblanc Southeast Asia
 ??  ?? Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Doué Classique pen and notebook
Montblanc Meisterstü­ck for Unicef Doué Classique pen and notebook
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