Private, limited liability company | |
Industry | Consumer Goods |
Founded | 1960 |
Founder | John Ulam |
Headquarters | Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, USA |
Products | cookware, ovenware, kitchen tools, kitchen accessories |
Parent | Groupe SEB |
Website | all-clad.com |
All-Clad Metalcrafters, LLC is a U.S. manufacturer of cookware with headquarters in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. The company markets its cookware to department stores and specialty stores in the United States, Australia, Canada, Germany, and the UK, along with All-Clad bonded ovenware, kitchen tools, and kitchen accessories.
The business was founded by metallurgist John Ulam, in 1967, as a manufacturer of bonded metals, including coinage for the U.S. Mint, avionics, and ballistics. The company was instrumental in the shift to bonded metal coins.
The company's move to cookware happened by accident, when Ulam made a pan for his personal use. All-Clad Metalcrafters was established in 1971 to sell this cookware.Bloomingdale's picked up the brand two years later, for its upscale housewares department. In 1988, All-Clad Metalcrafters was purchased by Pittsburgh Annealing Box Co. and in 2004, it was bought by the international company Groupe SEB.
At the time of its founding, All-Clad distinguished itself from other cookware companies by using a patented "roll bonding" process by which metals are sandwiched together and then formed into a cooking vessel. The company derived its name from this cladding process, which is applied not only on the bottom but extends all the way up the sides of each cooking vessel. The company has been issued several patents by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
The firm purchases its metals only from United States-based suppliers, including Pennsylvania Steel Company. In recent years, All-Clad has begun outsourcing some of its manufacturing to factories in China; these include products wherein the bonding of metals is not required (for example, kitchen tools and accessories), products comprising regular non-bonded components, or products for which manufacturing constraints exist at the Canonsburg plant (for example, electrical appliances).
The cooking surface is made from Type 304 stainless steel. The primary benefit of stainless steel over other metals is its nonreactive nature, which imparts no taste to the food. Some products include a nonstick coating on top of the stainless steel.