Ikea’s New Designer Collection Is Home-Office Heaven

Now that the hubbub of the cat-tested blow-up chair has calmed down, Ikea has taken the wraps off the rest of its latest PS Collection (which stands for Post Scriptum). Consisting of 44 pieces, including the viral inflatable PS 2026 Easy Chair, the furniture brand says the theme of the 2026 PS Collection is playful functionality.

The new PS Collection (available in stores from May 14, then online from May 22) has not one but two options for accommodating impromptu sleepovers. First is a stylish chair-bed by Matilda Lindstam Nilsson that comes in red and white colorways.

This retro armchair, which looks like it might just as well have come out of a 1970s Ikea collection, transforms from an upright single seat to a recliner for lounging, and then into a full-length bed complete with pocket springs for “mattress-level support.” For those in search of roomier berths, Ola Wihlborg has designed a sofa-bed with pocket springs and mattress foam that can sleep two.

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The chair bed.

Courtesy of Ikea

The two products from the collection that previewed at Milan Design Week in April, alongside the Easy Chair, were a rocking wooden bench and a flexible lamp. The solid pine rocking bench with its curved base, designed by Marta Krupińska, perhaps best exemplifies this playful theme, though WIRED would have to try it out first to see what sitting on it at a dining table for a family meal might be like. Late-night, post-bar drinks might be amusing.

Apparently, the bench’s rockers proved an early design challenge as they needed to be strong enough to hold adults. Initial wooden attempts failed, with one being completely flattened as Krupińska and a product engineer tried it. They tried reinforcing the wood with metal, but this meant the bench could not be recycled easily. Eventually, a method of splitting wood beams and then gluing them back together with the grain reversed on itself yielded rockers that were stronger than the metal-enhanced version.

Meanwhile, Ikea’s new flexible floor lamp marks the Swedish brand’s first collaboration with designer Lex Pott, who wanted to create a “lamp that bends,” and did so by inserting 45-degree swivel points into the light’s stand to fashion a metal lamp that transforms from an uplighter to a spotlight to a floor or reading light.

Mikael Axelsson, who designed Ikea’s excellent new blowup chair, has also created another of our favorite pieces from PS 2026: a stool with a ratchet-toothed construction inspired by simple woodworking tools acting as a low-tech height adjustment mechanism that is also delightfully and unapologetically analog. As with his inflatable chair, Axelsson enlisted his four daughters to strength-test various prototypes to nail the lever system, and he found that the design’s elementary nature only encouraged his children to use it more.

Wihlborg also designed a whimsical bedside table from pine that draws direct inspiration from traditional birdhouses, an idea that supposedly came to Wihlborg as he strolled through his garden. The table, with its familiar birdhouse hole on the front, hides practical storage behind the fold-down door, which repurposes that bird hole as the opening handle.

Looking to kit out home offices in budget style, the collection includes a four-seater folding table or desk by Wihlborg, crafted to be sturdy enough for everyday use, but collapsible to flat when needed via a few turns of the large, signature red wing screws.

Wihlborg has also designed a pink metal mesh and glass-door cabinet with adjustable feet and shelves, a cable outlet for integrated lighting, and cut-outs in the handles so it can be locked. Pott has added to the office chic with a powder-coated metal organization trolley that’s oddly reminiscent of a wedding cake. The color-matching wheels mean this can be trundled around with you as you move around workstations.

Krupińska has also created another of WIRED’s favorites, a steel and aluminum powder-coated table clock that looks more like a submarine periscope—perfect for sitting on that fold-flat desk and making sure you’re not late for the next meeting.

It was in the early 1990s when Ikea decided it wanted to supposedly get back to its roots and the aesthetic of Scandinavian simplicity. The result in 1995 was Ikea PS, the first of an intermittently recurring collection of pieces at low prices but with added design flair. The 2026 edition is the 10th outing for PS.

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