VINTAGE

The handles are modern reinterpretations of baroque shapes, with the beautiful curls and floral shapes of baroque pared down into elegant and minimal curve.

shop now

EPOQUE PEWTER

Mepra Epoque Pewter : an unique combination of hammered flatware with a stylish vintage finishing.

shop now

FANTASIA

The Perfect Combination Of Color And Sophiatication

shop now
  • MADE IN ITALY

    Three generations of Italian tradition, design and lifestyle.

  • Customize your flatware

  • Ships from Vendor

    Usually ships within 7 business days.

italian cookware

Discover the art of Italian cuisine with our sophisticated cookware collection. Bring a piece of Italy into your home.

STILE BY PININFARINA

From the first hand sketches to the final 3D models, the STILE collection has been conceived for the most refined and stylish home environments.

shop now

TOSCANA COPPER COOKWARE

The tradition of Italian cuisine combined with the most advanced cooking technology, to create an elegant and highly refined collection of cookware.

shop now

  • MEPRA SINCE 1947, ITALY

Mepra was created in 1947, but the entrepreneurial story of the Prandelli family starts many years earlier. In 1901, brothers Bortolo, Francesco and Giovanbattista create the first family business, Prandelli, in the Lumezzane Valley by the banks of River Gobbia to make use of its water’s kinetic energy that would allow machinery to operate.

The company’s factory used to manufacture for others and, during the First World War, produced bullets for the Italian Army. With the end of the war, the factory had to be converted to other uses, and Gianbattista’s three sons Pietro, Felice and Giacomo created Mepra, acronym for Metallurgica Prandelli (lit. Prandelli Metallurgical).

The first furnaces were installed outside because the material that needed to be melted during the war and post-war periods contained impurities made of water and gun powder. In 1950, the brothers decided to commit half of the production to stainless steel flatware. It was a huge success and in 1953 they decided to discontinue the production of brass cutlery altogether.