BIO
Francesca Ferracini & Alice Teruzzi, better known as Ferra&Ali are an Italian creative duo based in NYC. They started their career in Italy at Publicis where they worked on a number of acclaimed projects for clients such as Diesel, Heineken, Leroy Merlin, and Nescafé.
They then moved abroad to FCB London, where they worked on various clients like Kimberly-Clark, This Girl Can and on a project for “The Big Issue” -- a newspaper to help with the homelessness crisis that spiked during Covid. Their work for The Big Issue earned the Cannes Grand Prix, one of many accolades in their careers, which now include over 100 international awards, 20 Lions, 11 D&AD Pencils, and 2 Clio Grand Prix.
After moving to the USA and joining Ogilvy New York, in less than a year Francesca & Alice helped secure major global accounts, including Jameson Whisky, and produced one of the largest campaigns for a high-profile client yet to be launched.
In 2024, they earned their second Grand Prix Lion for Coca-Cola’s iconic Recycle Me campaign, which creatively deconstructed the world’s most famous logo to inspire recycling. In 2025, they also won the first-ever Lion for Sanpellegrino with the campaign With Love, Italy, and created the groundbreaking Powerade campaign The Athletes Code, which rewrote athlete contracts across the Coca-Cola company by putting mental health on the same level as physical health, allowing athletes to take mental health breaks without fear of losing their sponsorships.
Throughout their career they collaborate with the best in class: Bryan Buckley, Tom Kuntz, Matthijs van Heijningen, François Rousselet, Guy Ritchie, Maurizio Cattelan, Keith Schofield, Ali Ali, and more. They have been named among the most awarded creatives by the Drum World Rankings.
They are passionate about simple, insightful ideas and high craft. They teach at the Master Art Direction & Copywriting at the Politecnico of Milan. Alice has been a juror in the Film Craft Category for the ADCI, and Francesca recently featured in the Luerzers Archive with a piece about the difference between creativity and fashion in their Beauty+Fashion report.