Swiss Boiled Wool Blanket Key Rings by KARLEN Swiss

  • $18.00


A Trendy Swiss Tradition

Our handcrafted Swiss vintage woolen handbags are made out of recycled Swiss Military blankets.

Once used for centuries by the Swiss military in remote mountain huts to keep warm, these blankets became redundant with the advent of the sleeping bag. Our craftsman has cleverly recycled the blanket material, creating stylish handbags, shoppers and backpacks out of the still very useful boiled wool fabric. The bags are finished with classic Swiss leather straps.

ABOUT KARLEN SWISS    

Swiss Army Recycling Collection: Karlen - The height of fashion in the Swiss Alps
In the tiny village of Törbel in canton Valais, a booming cottage industry is churning out fashionable accessories against a backdrop of snowy peaks. Törbel is home to the unique and trendy 'Swiss Army Recycling Collection' - an ensemble of bags, key rings and rucksacks made from old Swiss Army blankets.
In a tucked-away workshop six local women buzz away at sewing machines, producing the distinctive brown-grey designs with a red stripe and a white Swiss cross.
The collection is the brainchild of the freelance designer, Walter Maurer, who has spent more than 30 years as a 'funky' ethnic designer.

Army Blankets
After discovering that the Swiss army had stockpiles of unused blankets left over from their switch to sleeping bags in the sixties, he quickly started incorporating the material into his work.
'They have tons of them in big holes in the mountains' he explains. 'They were produced in case of war and we never had a war, so now they're old but never used.'

The wool is fairly coarse, which makes it ideal for heavy-duty bags and the design has proved to be a firm favourite with the younger generation.
The collection is sold in what Maurer terms the 'in' shops in cities all over the world, with stockists as far a field as Tokyo.

Sleepy village
Törbel is a sleepy village, far removed from the hustle and bustle of city life and at first sight the workshop's location seems completely incongruous.
The mini-factory is, however, a joint venture between Maurer and Törbel's resident cobbler, Titus Karlen.

Karlen, who has lived in the alpine village all his life, used to make rucksacks for the Swiss army, but as a result of army cutbacks, his orders have dramatically decreased.
'I had to look for new ways to get business to make sure my work shop survived,' he says. 'In the mountain villages we need work. I still make things for the Swiss Army but not as many as before.'

The 'Swiss Army Recycling collection' turned out to be the silver lining he was searching for and for the past couple of years him and Maurer have enjoyed a fruitful partnership.

Standard Army issue
Apart from the zips and fasteners, everything that goes into the items is ex-army standard issue. The straps are disused gun straps, softened and flattened by a special machine and soldier's belts act as seam strengtheners.

The workshop is a hive of activity and buzzes with the sounds of sewing machines, hole punchers, zips and leather softening machines.

 


 


 

 

 

 


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