IKEA Just Gave the Allen Key a Glow-Up Nobody Saw Coming

You know exactly where this is going the moment IKEA hands you that little L-shaped hex key. You use it once, maybe twice, cross your fingers the furniture doesn’t wobble, and then it disappears into the junk drawer, a kitchen counter corner, or the bottom of a tote bag you haven’t opened since 2021. The allen key has never been a thing anyone kept on purpose. Until now.

IKEA Singapore, working with creative agency The Secret Little Agency, has reimagined the brand’s iconic flat-pack tool as a piece of wearable jewelry. The ALLËNKI, as it’s been named (and yes, the umlaut is doing a lot of heavy lifting there), is the humble allen key redesigned to hang from a chain as a pendant. It leans hard into an industrial aesthetic, the kind that lives somewhere between a Depop vintage find and something a contemporary menswear designer would slip into a lookbook without explanation. Raw, utilitarian, and surprisingly chic. I did not expect to want a hex wrench around my neck. And yet, here we are.

Designers: The Secret Little Agency for IKEA Singapore

What makes the ALLËNKI genuinely interesting as a design concept isn’t just the novelty of it. It’s the fact that it remains fully functional. The piece isn’t a replica or a decorative prop styled to look like the real thing. It’s the actual tool, shaped into something you’d wear. That framing, which the designers describe as “hardware meets heirloom,” is doing a lot of the creative work here, and it does it well. There’s a real conversation happening in contemporary design right now about the objects we use every day and why we’ve decided some deserve beauty and others don’t. The ALLËNKI is a pretty sharp response to that question, even if the response comes with a chain and a studio-lit campaign.

The branding also knows exactly what it is. The campaign leans into humor and self-awareness, which is the right call. A jewelry line built around a furniture tool that most people lose within 48 hours of unboxing a bookcase doesn’t need to take itself too seriously. The Secret Little Agency managed that balance well, keeping the design itself genuinely considered while letting the concept breathe with a bit of absurdity. That’s harder to pull off than it sounds. Most brand stunts either try too hard to be funny or take themselves so seriously that the joke lands flat. This one sits in the right place.

Now, the catch. The ALLËNKI dropped on April 1st, which puts a fairly significant asterisk on the whole thing. Whether it was an April Fools’ stunt, a concept piece, or an actual product in development isn’t entirely clear. Store availability, if any, has not been confirmed. And while part of me wants to be cynical about that, the other part of me thinks the ambiguity might be intentional. It functions as a piece of cultural commentary either way. If it becomes real, great. If it doesn’t, it still made people stop and look at a two-inch hex key like it had something worth saying.

And maybe that’s the bigger point. The ALLËNKI asks you to reconsider what makes something worth keeping. We’ve watched fashion absorb work boots, industrial hardware, and construction aesthetics for years. Luxury brands have put carabiners on bags and charged several hundred dollars for the privilege. In that context, turning the allen key into a pendant feels less like a joke and more like a logical next step in a long line of utilitarian objects getting a second life. IKEA has always understood that good design shouldn’t be reserved for expensive things. Extending that thinking into wearables, even as a concept, feels genuinely on-brand.

Whether or not the ALLËNKI ever lands on store shelves, it’s already doing what good design work does. It’s got people talking, reconsidering a mundane object, and maybe feeling just a little possessive over something they used to throw in a drawer without a second thought. That’s a win, April Fools or not.

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Pocket-Sized Electric Screwdriver has a 200RPM Max Speed to make your DIY projects easy breezy

With 10 different speeds to choose from, a maximum torque of 12 kgf.cm, the ability to spin clockwise and counter-clockwise, and an exhaustive kit containing 50 different driver bits, the Voltwist-V1 is a DIY essential. It makes disassembling, repairing, and assembling stuff ridiculously easy, and when all’s said and done, the entire kit (no larger than a bar of chocolate) can fit right in your workshop or even office table drawer for another day and another DIY project. Plus, at $56 for the full kit, it’s quite the no-brainer…

Designer: Voltwist

Click Here to Buy Now: $56 $89 (35% off) Hurry! Only 6 days left!

Barely the size of a fountain pen, the Voltwist-V1 looks like just a regular screwdriver, but packs a whole lot of impressive tech underneath. The pocket-sized electric screwdriver comes armed with a metallic body, a minimally slick design, and an intuitive user interface that leaves little to be desired. It all starts really with the LCD screen on the top, which tells you your battery level as well as the screwing direction, followed by two buttons below that let you toggle between clockwise and counter-clockwise movements based on the classic ‘righty tighty lefty loosey’ adage.

Swap directions just by pressing a button. Watch the screen for an indication.

You’d expect an electric screwdriver to be somewhat complicated to operate, but the Voltwist-V1’s design couldn’t possibly make things easier. Once you choose from the 50 bits that come in the V1’s kit, just load it in, and turn the knob at the tip to cycle between 10 different speed/torque settings (depending on whether you’re working with heavy-duty stuff that needs more torque, or small electronic items that you want to speed through). Select the setting of your choice, and simply hit the button under the screen to begin opening screws. Post-repair, the lowermost button helps you put the screws back, satisfyingly tightening them so that they don’t accidentally open after.

All you really have to do then is hold the screwdriver in place as it automatically rotates to tighten or loosen screws. A set of LED lights on either side helps illuminate your working zone, so whether you’re in the dark or your screw’s hidden away in a tiny corner, visibility is never an issue.

The Voltwist-V1 runs on a 650mAh battery, giving it its ridiculously slim and handy design. The Li-ion battery lasts 90 minutes on a full charge, getting you through lengthy projects without really needing to worry about running out of juice. If you do, though… a USB-C port on the reverse end of the screwdriver lets you charge it up to 90% in just 10 minutes, so a quick coffee break and you’re ready to get back to work. In fact, the Voltwist-V1’s case comes with a nifty little cutout that exposes the USB-C port too, allowing you to effectively charge your screwdriver while it’s still in the case (a clever way to ensure you don’t need to take your screwdriver out every single time you want to juice the battery).

Each Voltwist comes with a dedicated case that contains 50 popular S2 hex-bits to choose from, along with a magnetizer that lets you quickly and easily magnetize screws while working with them. The screwdriver itself is 5.3 inches long (the size of a standard fountain pen), and sits in a case 6.9 inches long, 2.8 inches wide, and weighing 0.92 lbs (422 grams) in total. Each Voltwist starts at $56, heavily discounted over its original $89 price tag. The Voltwist-V1 ships globally starting May 2024, so grab yours now instead of living in the stone age with those *ugh* manual screwdrivers…

Click Here to Buy Now: $56 $89 (35% off) Hurry! Only 6 days left!

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