Mont Blanc The White Mountain.
6.8652° E
The highest peak in Western Europe. The mountain where modern alpinism began. Frame N° 04 carries that lineage — a pantos silhouette in the classical European tradition. Polished steel. Sterling silver. Heritage, not heritage-style.
First ascent · 167 years before Everest. The climb that began the sport.
The mountain
that started a sport.
Mont Blanc is the highest peak of the Alps and Western Europe — a snow-domed massif of granite spires, glaciers, and aiguilles spanning the French-Italian border. On 8 August 1786, two men reached the summit without ropes, oxygen, or any equipment a modern climber would recognise. Modern alpinism, as a sport, begins on this date.
Frame N° 04
Mont Blanc.
FRAME SPECIFICATIONS View specifications
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The inner temple of every Frame N° 04 carries: 45.8326° N, 6.8652° E. The roof of Europe. White majesty. The original alpinist's summit.
Mont Blanc was first climbed on August 8, 1786. Two men — Jacques Balmat, a crystal hunter, and Michel Paccard, a country doctor — left the village of Chamonix without rope, without crampons, without supplemental oxygen, without any of the equipment that would later define mountaineering. They walked up. They reached the summit. They became the first humans known to stand at 4,808 metres above sea level. Modern alpinism was born that day.
The prize they were chasing had been offered by Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, a Geneva scientist, twenty-six years earlier. The reward sat unclaimed for over two decades — the mountain considered impossible, the journey considered fatal. Balmat and Paccard collected the prize. De Saussure himself summited the following year, accompanied by eighteen guides. The era of the gentleman climber began.
The coordinate marks the birthplace of the sport. Etched into a frame made in the same Italian Alps the mountain rises from.
The Heritage mark.
FIELD JOURNAL Read field journal
Where the
sport begins.
8 August 1786. Two men. No fixed ropes. No oxygen. No equipment a modern climber would recognise.
Jacques Balmat and Michel-Gabriel Paccard reach the summit of Mont Blanc. They do this for no commercial reason, no political reason, no scientific reason that holds up in retrospect. They climb because the mountain is there.
Mountaineering, as a sport, begins on this date. Not a survival skill. Not military reconnaissance. A discipline pursued for its own sake. One hundred and sixty-seven years before the first Everest summit.
Mont Blanc is not the highest mountain in the Summit Series. It is the oldest. The mountain that taught Europe — and through Europe, the world — that summits could be reached for their own sake. That the climb itself was the thing.
Frame N° 04 was built in that lineage. A pantos silhouette — the classic European optic. Polished steel rivets on the front. A hallmarked sterling silver pin on the inner temple. Heritage, not heritage-style.
For those who understand that elegance is what's left when nothing more can be removed.
The frame is
the key.
Every Mont Blanc frame ships with a unique Altitude Code etched on the inner temple. Activate it inside Basecamp and unlock lifetime Elite access — built into the frame, not a subscription.
- Lifetime Elite tier in Basecamp
- Access to the Atlas — global ascent record
- Eligibility for the Mont Blanc Challenge · Alpine-grade peaks
- Priority allocation on all future drops
- Heritage mark · Frame N° 04 lineage
Request Frame
N° 04.
First access. Limited allocation. Mont Blanc · 111 numbered.