
Most furniture gets described in one of two ways: you either call it comfortable or you call it beautiful. Rarely do you call it both, and almost never do you say a chair made you stop mid-scroll to figure out if it was real. The Bublyk lounge chair by Ukrainian designer Andrii Kovalskyi managed all three in a single glance.
The name is a clue. Bublyk is the Ukrainian word for a ring-shaped bread, essentially a bagel’s Eastern European cousin, and once you know that, you can’t unsee it. The torus geometry at the heart of the design, that classic ring form, is suddenly the most obvious and delightful thing in the room. But Kovalskyi doesn’t stop at one shape. He stacks cylindrical volumes alongside the torus, letting them collide and nestle against each other until the whole thing reads less like furniture and more like a soft, living sculpture that decided to sit down.
Designer: Andrii Kovalskyi

What makes this concept genuinely interesting is how Kovalskyi managed to make hard geometric forms feel warm. Torus and cylinder are architectural, mathematical shapes. They belong in textbooks and CAD files. But wrapped in a granular, speckled upholstery that carries the warmth of hand-woven textile, these volumes lose their rigidity entirely. The result is a monolithic form that still feels inviting, like a piece of abstract art you are actually allowed to sit in.

The upholstery deserves its own moment. Versions of the chair use fabrics from Kvadrat Febrik’s Sprinkles collection, and the effect is layered and compelling. Up close, each chair reads like a field of tiny woven dots and shifting patterns, the kind of surface your hands would instinctively want to reach out and touch. From a distance, the texture gives each piece an almost painterly depth, one that shifts in tone with the light. It’s the kind of material decision that elevates a strong silhouette into something that genuinely rewards sustained attention.

The collection spans a range of configurations and colorways. One version wraps the torus body in a cylindrical bolster backrest, giving it a composed, upright posture. Another presents just the torus form, low and reclining, balanced on two short cylinder legs. Viewed side by side, the variations feel like family, different personalities sharing the same underlying design logic. The colorways lean into the boldness: deep crimson reds, powdery blues, warm ochre yellows, earthy burnt oranges. None of these chairs are trying to disappear into a wall.

That feels intentional. Much of contemporary furniture design has been running hard toward quiet luxury: restrained silhouettes, neutral tones, pieces that function as background. Bublyk pushes in the opposite direction. It wants to be the first thing you notice when you walk into a room, and the piece people ask about when they visit. Whether that boldness translates into commercial production remains to be seen, since this is still a concept, but the appetite for character-driven furniture has been building for a while.

One of Kovalskyi’s renders shows the modular components stacked into abstract, totem-like arrangements, hinting at a broader system potential. If these volumes can be reconfigured or mixed across pieces, Bublyk stops being a single statement chair and becomes something closer to a design language. That is a genuinely compelling idea, the kind of thinking that separates a good concept from a lasting one.
Kovalskyi has been designing original furniture and interior objects since 2016, working out of Lviv, Ukraine. His practice spans furniture, lighting, and 3D visualization, and his work consistently shows a willingness to treat form as something to play with, rigorously but also with a sense of humor. The Bublyk chair captures that balance well. The name alone, borrowed from a humble ring-shaped bread, keeps the whole project grounded even as the visual ambition reaches upward.

Comfort is built into the promise. The ergonomics, shaped by the geometry and supported by the granular upholstery, suggest this isn’t purely a sculptural exercise. A person is supposed to sit in it and feel held. If Kovalskyi delivers that in production, Bublyk won’t just be a chair people admire from across the room. It’ll be the one nobody wants to get up from.

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