IKEA Just Built 18 World Cup Flags Out of Furniture

Every few years, the FIFA World Cup does what few things can: it makes the whole planet pay attention to the same thing at the same time. Brands, naturally, line up to be part of that moment. Most of them shouldn’t bother. The average World Cup campaign is either a celebrity-filled spectacle that forgets to say anything, or a half-hearted logo slap on a football kit. And then IKEA Canada goes and does something genuinely clever.

Assemble the World is a social-first campaign created with Dentsu Creative, and the premise is almost embarrassingly simple: take IKEA products and arrange them to look like national flags from competing World Cup nations. Cushions, rugs, lamps, candles, cabinets, plush toys, outdoor tables. All laid out, stacked, and styled until they read as the flag of Brazil, or Japan, or Morocco. Eighteen flags in total, each one built entirely from items you could actually buy.

Designer: IKEA Canada

The execution matters here. These aren’t mood board collages or loosely themed flat lays. The compositions are precise enough to be immediately recognizable, and playful enough to make you smile. Part of the campaign’s appeal is that you have to look closely. Each image invites you to spot the products before clicking through to shop them. It’s a scavenger hunt, a flag quiz, and a product catalogue all at once.

That last part is worth sitting with for a moment. The campaign has a shoppable component baked directly into every piece of content, which means the fun and the commerce aren’t separate experiences. They’re the same experience. That’s a much harder thing to pull off than it sounds. Most branded content either prioritizes entertainment at the expense of the product, or prioritizes the product so heavily that the entertainment evaporates. Assemble the World manages to keep both plates spinning.

What makes it land, I think, is that it doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It doesn’t position IKEA as a football brand or manufacture a deep emotional connection to the beautiful game. It just borrows the World Cup’s energy and applies IKEA’s own visual language to it. The result feels authentically IKEA, which is a genuinely difficult thing to achieve during a moment when every brand is trying to sound like it belongs at the stadium.

Canada is also a meaningful backdrop for this, as one of the three host country’s for this year’s edition of the World Cup. The country’s multicultural makeup is part of what the campaign quietly gestures toward, giving the flag concept a layer of relevance that goes beyond the tournament. For a lot of Canadians watching the World Cup, those flags represent personal histories, not just national teams. IKEA leaning into that feels less like a marketing angle and more like an honest observation about who their customers actually are.

The campaign runs across social media, digital channels, and outdoor advertising near IKEA store locations throughout the summer. The call to action, “Click, Buy, Wave,” is a bit cheeky, maybe a little too tidy, but it doesn’t take away from what the campaign does well overall.

Not every brand moment during a major sporting event needs to be profound. Sometimes the best thing a brand can do is show up with something that’s visually satisfying, conceptually tight, and worth two minutes of your time. Assemble the World is exactly that. It doesn’t overstay its welcome, it doesn’t overclaim, and it makes a catalogue of household items feel genuinely festive. In a summer already crowded with World Cup content, that’s no small thing. IKEA found the version of this campaign that only IKEA could do, which is the goal every brand chases and very few actually reach.

The post IKEA Just Built 18 World Cup Flags Out of Furniture first appeared on Yanko Design.