Portions of this article are cited from an existing story, “Swiss Army Switch-Up: Iconic Knife Brands Merge,” published on GearJunkie last year.

The train was on time, to the Swiss minute, as I boarded for a cross-country trip. It was 2010, and I was in Switzerland traveling between two powerhouses of the knife world.
Wenger and Victorinox, respectively in the cities of Delémont and Ibach, both made Swiss Army Knives. As sister brands, they were owned by the same parent company and over the decades had each pumped out millions of the iconic pocketknives.
This changed last year. Wenger and Victorinox were merged to make a singular Swiss Army brand.

Stamped now only with the Victorinox logo, Swiss Army Knives come in about 215 individual models (and 500 varieties if you include color options).
This summer, the first of the new Victorinox/Wenger models came off the production line. It’s branded as Victorinox and called the Delémont Collection, referencing the Swiss city of origin and the home to the factory where the knives are made.
The Delémont Collection knives embody traits from both Wenger and Victorinox, including a range of implements and handles that come contoured, inlayed with rubber material, and with wood grip options.
In all, there are 56 new Swiss Army knives. The requisite blades, drivers, files, wrenches, punches, openers, and pliers are present. But so are nail clippers, scissors, rulers, tiny compasses, and even cigar cutters on some of the models.

