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Some collaborations are built on obvious visual overlap. Others make more sense once you get closer to the process. The new project between Alessi and C.P. Company, unveiled during Milan Design Week 2026, belongs to the second category: less about superficial crossover, more about two Italian brands finding common ground in experimentation, industrial memory and the idea that objects should change with use.
At the centre of the collaboration is coffee, which feels appropriately Italian but also surprisingly precise. The capsule reworks a cluster of Alessi design staples — most notably Richard Sapper’s 9090 espresso maker, here issued in a limited edition of 999 numbered pieces — alongside an Arran tray by Enzo Mari and coffee cups and a mug by Jean Nouvel. On the clothing side, C.P. Company contributes its signature overshirt, updated with a custom Lens detail and released in three colourways.
What makes the project click is the finish. The metal objects are treated with manual sandblasting and a black PVD coating, creating a darker, matte industrial surface designed to evolve over time. That logic mirrors C.P. Company’slong-standing interest in garment dyeing and wear: materials that do not stay pristine, but gather character. The whole thing feels like an argument for patina in an era still obsessed with clean perfection.
That shared philosophy is apparently what brought the two houses together in the first place. Official descriptions of the collaboration frame both brands as treating the archive like a working laboratory rather than a museum, and the factory not just as a place of production, but as a site of testing, revision and invention. It is the kind of language fashion and design often use loosely, but here it actually lands, because the objects and garments both seem built around transformation rather than simple preservation.
There is also a nice refusal of overstatement in the product mix. Instead of building an inflated lifestyle universe from scratch, the collaboration keeps returning to one daily act: making coffee. That ritual becomes the hinge between domestic design and technical fashion. A tray, a moka pot, a mug, an overshirt — together they suggest a world, but a restrained one, grounded in routine rather than fantasy. That last point is an interpretation based on the collection’s coffee-centered object selection and both brands’ framing of the collaboration.
The overshirt itself adds another layer of brand history. Reporting around the release says two of its colours were inspired by Ettore Sottsass’s 1983 Alessi factory uniforms, pulling a very specific thread from Italian design history into C.P. Company’s workwear-inflected vocabulary. That gives the fashion side of the collaboration something more interesting than mere logo exchange: it becomes a small archive exercise in its own right.
To launch the project, the brands presented an installation titled “BLEND: The Kinetic Pulse of Italian Industrial Mastery” at the C.P. Company showroom in Milan, running during Milan Design Week from April 21, 2026. The collection is being sold through the brands’ official channels and flagship stores, with some items available individually as well as in a special set configuration.







Photos: Alessi / C.P. Company
