Campo Marzio Design, the Italian design company of international repute headquartered in Rome, has launched its first Malta Design Boutique at the Palazzo Falson Historic House Museum in Mdina.

Campo Marzio has taken over and re-vamped the Palazzo Falson gift shop, turning it into one of its fashionable signature shops and adding it to the list of cutting edge retail outlets that dot influential locations including the most important cultural capitals across Europe and Asia.

The shop boasts of a vast array of top quality stylish high-end gifts, stationery and products such as pens, wallets, briefcases and business card holders, planners, photo albums, and all kinds of writing instruments all in rich and vibrant colours that satisfy the needs of both business consumers as well as those shopping for leisure.

Creating an effective combination between craft and design, tradition and trend, Campo Marzio has applied fashion to writing instruments and to everything else that revolves around them, turning common stationery products into fashion accessories for the business and art community.

Every season each collection is designed and renewed by following the latest fashion trends. All Campo Marzio’s products are completely developed by the company’s design department and the product line’s style is recognised all over the world.

“We are delighted to be extending our already extensive footprint with a Design Boutique in Malta” said Roberto di Giorgio, CEO of Campo Design International Ltd.

“The historic town of Mdina fits our market target and brand equity perfectly while Palazzo Falson provides us with the prestigious address and added value that our brand requires. The next step will be to create a brand new product line inspired by the Palazzo Falson collection in order to personalize the portfolio offered to visitors and museum patrons.”

Campo Marzio Design has long consolidated its brand positioning by successfully collaborating with some of the most distinguished museums worldwide such as the Vatican Museum, London’s Tate Gallery, the British Museum, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Guggenheim and Milan’s Duomo among others.

Palazzo Falson’s curator Francesca Balzan said “Museums today are expected to not only offer the public an educational experience and an emotional encounter, but also to develop related business and marketing activities to promote the image of the museum and offer visitors added value.

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