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IKEA Waited 12 Years to Show This Inflatable Chair at Milan Design Week

Air has always been free. IKEA designer Mikael Axelsson has been thinking about that fact for over a decade, sitting on an idea he first sketched in 2014 and shelved when no one at the company wanted to revisit inflatable furniture. The concept never disappeared, it just waited. At Milan Design Week 2026, inside the “Food For Thought” exhibition at Spazio Maiocchi, that idea finally got its moment. The PS 2026 Easy Chair arrived alongside a rocking bench and a flexible floor lamp, three pieces offering the first real look at the upcoming tenth IKEA PS collection.

What Axelsson built reads, at first glance, like a fairly conventional lounge chair. Rich green fabric, cylindrical cushions, a compact and settled silhouette. The chrome tubing running around its perimeter is the tell, holding the inflatable volumes in place and giving the chair its shape and its credibility, keeping it far from the transparent, wobbly inflatables of the early 2000s. The separate air chambers between seat and backrest mean the sitting experience feels grounded rather than unpredictable. The lightness only reveals itself when someone actually lifts it.

Designer: Mikael Axelsson for IKEA

Mikael Axelsson is tapping into a design language that’s been trusted for nearly a century. It’s the same basic idea that made Le Corbusier’s Grand Confort a classic back in 1928: a rigid steel cage with soft cushions sitting inside. That frame is what makes the whole thing work. Without it, you’d just have a novelty green cushion that would feel out of place anywhere but a college dorm room. With the frame, the chair feels intentional and composed, and the backrest bolster sits with conviction across the top rail. The fact that it’s full of air is the last thing you notice, which is exactly the point.

The details here are just as smart. The fabric wrap gets rid of that annoying squeak and slide you might remember from old inflatable furniture, making it feel more like an actual upholstered piece. It comes with a manual foot pump instead of an electric one, which not only keeps the price down but also makes you part of the assembly process. It feels right for a chair that’s all about interacting with its materials. The deep green color seen in Milan is the kind of confident tone that can anchor a corner of a room without taking over.

 

The PS collection has always been IKEA’s design playground, a space for them to experiment since it first launched back in 1995. The rocking bench by Marta Krupinska has these wonderfully exaggerated runners, and Lex Pott’s floor lamp uses a simple diagonal cut so you can aim the light in three different directions. The full collection is set to launch on May 13, 2026. But the easy chair makes the sharpest point of the three. It argues that a chair built mostly on air can absolutely belong at Salone, as long as someone has thought carefully enough about the frame.

If you’re in Milan and want to see it for yourself, the chair is part of IKEA’s ‘Food For Thought’ exhibition. It’s being held at Spazio Maiocchi, located at Via Achille Maiocchi 7. The installation is open to the public and runs from April 21st through the 26th. It’s a great chance to see the chair, the lamp, and the bench in a setting that’s more about experience than just product display.

The post IKEA Waited 12 Years to Show This Inflatable Chair at Milan Design Week first appeared on Yanko Design.



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