Alessi Mami Tea Kettle

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Tea Kettles » Alessi Mami Tea Kettle
Alessi Mami Tea Kettle
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Marketplace (2 New)
  1. Kitchen
  2. Publisher: Alessi
  3. Sales Rank in Kitchen & Housewares: #69736

Product Review

Giovannoni has perfected the necessary symbiotic relationship between aesthetic and functional design for Contemporary and pop culture appeal. With each design Giovannoni truly brings a touch of the future to your everyday tasks.

Product Features

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Sexy Kettle, March 11, 2011
CBL - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Alessi Mami Tea Kettle (Kitchen)
There's no doubt that Alessi make some very beautiful pieces. While lots of people are familiar with the Michael Graves kettle, and even the Rossi one, this Mami kettle seems to have gone under the radar. I think that's a pity; for me, this is easily the pick of the three.

First things first. The photo that you generally see doesn't do it justice; it looks like there's some black blob in the middle of it. In fact the kettle is an elegant, sinuous curve (reminiscent of a French Curve - for those old enough to remember what that was) that's finished in a flawless, polished stainless steel. It's quite difficult to get a sense for how sexy and understated a shape it is until you hold it in your hands.

Secondly, while the handle and the whistle are equally elegant and understated, the high point for me is the whistle. I was quite unprepared for how delightful a sound it makes. It just sits there, nonchalantly, until the time comes for it do its thing, and then...Read more


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Good form, bad function, January 12, 2012
Design Maven (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Alessi Mami Tea Kettle (Kitchen)
This is an extremely beautiful object. It reflects the kitchen like a fish eye lens, and it makes me happy just to look at it. However, the plastic cap is PLASTIC. As in, it melts if you have the heat up a little too high. I'm not so good at monitoring the flame height of my stove when I first wake up in the morning, which was never an issue before buying this kettle -- I melted the cap the very first time I used it, and did it again a couple days later even though I was trying to be careful. Now, it's a not-so-beautiful object. Replacement caps are available at the Alessi store. I'm guessing it will cost at least $30. And I will likely melt the new one too.

It does seem that there must be some material they could use for the cap that doesn't melt. Aren't they supposed to be design geniuses? Just sayin'.

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