First you would have had to know that they made (and make to this day) a lot more knives than the ‘Bestsellers’/‘Evergreens’ you could get almost everywhere. And then you would have to had access to their massive catalog. Which every dealer should have had, but honestly except the old-school cutlery stores, no one bothered with.
I have my own personal story with Victorinox. I had to have one as a kid and got my first when I was about 6 years old. In 1998 when I was almost 12, I send Victorinox a drawing I had made. They kindly replied and gifted me a ‘Huntsman’ with camouflage scales. I had never seen the Victorinox camouflage scales before, but the one thing I remember from my drawing is that it specified ‘camouflage scales’. So I was stoked they made me one. Much later I found out that they actually did offer these scales in other markets. Although I don’t know if they did back in ‘98. But my guess is, they did - as they probably didn’t set up machinery to produce a pair of scales for a 12 years old boy. …

They also send me a big envelope packed with information about the brand, stickers, postcards, flyers, (…).
Back in that day, my big dream was also owning one of their fabulous ‘point of sale display cabinets’.
So here’s the ‘Huntsman‘ they gifted to me. I retired it in ‘19 because of ever changing regulations around knives, I couldn’t bear loosing this. I fitted it with new camouflage scales and put it in my table top display - with a couple of knives that were important enough to me to keep. (And obviously those I EDC.) (Yes, I obviously kept the original/used scales.

)
Having been a knife collector, I at some point got the opportunity to own this as well, although that was not from the time when I was a kid. Already shows the only much later introduced leather cases with the metal emblem. So I sold it at some point as it wasn’t that important to me anymore. Would have been different if it had been an older ’time period correct’ one.
What I deeply love about the Victorinox brand to this day, and that never changed for me, no matter what type/brand of knife - or custom knife - I carried, was the message they set out about a knife being a useful tool. Nothing more, nothing less. Adventure, family, being prepared. The display brings that across nicely.
And while I can only shake my head regarding the ‘Swiss knife-less’ that is about to hit markets (maybe it is already there, never looked since I’m not interested.) I guess it’s where we at regarding knife regulations in so many places these days. And I will stop here, for not breaking any GJ rules. So please, just forget that I wrote that.
All in all, great memories and Victorinox is an excellent brand.
Kind regards,
Olli