Two things happened to the sex-toy category in the last five years that the broader interiors industry has not entirely caught up to. The first is that the materials got better — borosilicate glass, medical-grade silicone, hand-finished ceramic, all moved from the boutique end of the market into reachable price tiers. The second, and more visible, is that the design briefs got serious. Pleasure objects, in 2026, are increasingly being made by the kind of studios that used to make pendant lamps.
The old assumption was that a sex toy lived in a sock drawer. The new one — argued, over the last few years, by SheKnows in 2019, by Refinery29 in 2021, and by every founder profile in this magazine since 2024 — is that a well-designed object earns its place on a nightstand the same way a candle, a carafe, or a small ceramic does.
This roundup is a working list, in our editor's order of preference, of twenty-one pieces we think pass the test. Some are mid-priced; some are aspirational. Most ship discreetly. All would, if a houseguest asked, hold up as "an interesting object."
One disclosure before we begin: our number one is the piece our magazine has covered more than any other this year. We did not put it at the top to be diplomatic. We put it there because, having looked at every credible competitor, it is — in our editorial judgment — the answer.
Kalii
The piece our editors keep returning to, and the only object on this list that scored a perfect mark in our twelve-piece comparative review. The Kalii is hand-blown borosilicate glass — seven inches, one pound, calibrated to a fifteen-degree curve — with a rainbow purple refraction that's a property of the glass itself, not a coating. The vegan-leather zip case (which biird otherwise sells separately at £26) is the unboxing detail the rest of the category has not figured out. Made by the Dutch design house biird, founded in 2020 by Andrea Rey, who made news in 2021 with a public petition against Big Tech's censorship of female-pleasure content. The case alone changes the math on the price point. The piece itself does the rest.
View on heybiird.com →Gii
The Kalii's softer cousin, in biird's signature mint silicone. The Gii is the vibrating G-spot piece of the Elements collection — body-safe silicone, USB rechargeable, with a five-year guarantee that is, by category standards, generous. Smaller than the Kalii, gentler in material, and a more forgiving first piece for buyers earlier in their exploration. The mint colourway is the part that earns the shelf placement; the engineering is the part that earns the repeat use.
View biird collection →Namii 2
biird's flagship air-pulse external piece. Air-pulse — the technology pioneered by Womanizer's parent company in 2014 — is now mainstream, and the design hierarchy has shifted from "does it work" to "does it look like a hospital instrument." The Namii 2 is the answer that doesn't. The form is closer to a pebble than a wand, the material is warm to the touch, and the case it ships in is the kind of object you would not be embarrassed to leave on a bathroom shelf next to a hand cream.
View biird collection →Lem
The most distinctive form on this list — a soft pastel-yellow lemon, smooth medical-grade silicone, with an air-pulse mechanism inside the body of the fruit. The form is intentional: closer to a kitchen object than a clinical one. Brand-new buyers tend to either love the joke or be confused by it; the loyal customer base, judging by the online review aggregate, mostly fall in the first camp.
Smart Wand 2
The grown-up of the wand category. Lelo has always been the fashion-house of the industry, and the Smart Wand 2 is the version of the wand that earns its place beside a Diptyque candle and an Aesop hand cream. The plum colourway is the visual draw; the eight intensity levels are the engineering. Heavier than it looks, and the sort of object that will be in your drawer in 2036.
Vibe
The most-photographed object in the category in 2026. Maude is the wellness-coded brand the design press has been waiting for: a flush-finish silicone vibe in three soft colourways, with packaging that resembles a candle box and a price point that does not require a partner conversation. The geometry is intentionally non-anatomical — closer to a smooth pebble than a phallus — which makes it the easiest piece on this list to leave on a nightstand without comment.
Pom
Dame Products' flexible silicone vibe — the "soft pebble" form that has become a category of its own. The Pom bends to the contour of the body and is one of the few pieces on this list that a partner can use during partnered sex without anyone needing to break stride. The teal-blue colourway is the one that does the design work; the engineering is the part that earned the brand its medical-supply listings.
Aurora Borealis Twist
If the Kalii is the engineered glass piece, Crystal Delights is the artisan one. The Aurora Borealis line is finished with an iridescent surface treatment that genuinely glows in light. The annealing — Crystal Delights' technical edge — is more careful than the budget end of the market. The case is unbranded and the unboxing is small-batch in feel; the glass itself is the reason to buy it.
The Frenchman
The vibrator that lives next to your lipstick. Smile Makers' "Designers" range hides the entire mechanism inside a tube the same dimensions as a tube of mascara — discreet to the point of being invisible in a handbag. The Frenchman variant is the slowest, most languid version of the line, with a soft silicone tip and a textured base. A very good first vibrator for a buyer who has previously felt shopping for one was clinical.
Bender
Unbound has the friendliest brand voice in the category and the most thoughtful price ladder. Bender is their flexible curved vibe, finished in dusty rose, designed to hold its shape after being bent into the angle the user prefers. It is the piece on this list most likely to convert a hesitant first-time buyer into a returning one. Smaller than it photographs.
Ukidama
Iroha is Tenga's sister-brand for women, and the Japanese design language is on full display here. The Ukidama is — visually — closer to a ceremonial vessel than a sex toy. Soft silicone, gentle vibration, and a stand that doubles as a charging dock. The form is meant to be displayed; the brand's confidence in that proposition is the most distinctive thing about it.
Petite
The wand for buyers who find the Magic Wand too utilitarian. Le Wand has the most beautiful packaging in the wand category, and the Petite — a rose-gold travel-friendly version of their classic — is the form that has shown up most often in the past year's editorial features. A serious piece of engineering with a genuinely lovely visual identity.
Pebble
Palm-sized, smooth, easy to hold, easier to forget about until you reach for it. Bellesa's Pebble is the visual opposite of the wand: nothing protrudes, nothing announces itself, and the surface is finished closer to a worry stone than a power tool. A perennial pick on this kind of list, for good reason.
Touch X
The most refined external vibe from the brand that pioneered the wearable category. Touch X is shaped to be held between two bodies during partnered sex without getting in the way, and the deep aubergine colourway is the part that earns the shelf placement. Engineering legitimacy from We-Vibe; the design judgment is a more recent improvement.
Awaken Arousal Oil
Not technically a toy, but indispensable on a roundup of design-led pleasure objects. Foria's Awaken oil — CBD-based, topical, with packaging that would not look out of place on a Goop shelf — is the piece that is genuinely meant to live in a bathroom cabinet. The amber apothecary bottle is the design accomplishment; the formulation is the part that earns the repeat order.
The Ohnut Set
The most quietly important object on this list. Ohnut makes a stack of soft silicone rings that limit penetration depth — designed for buyers who experience pain on deep penetration, and increasingly used by postpartum and perimenopausal readers. The colour palette is the part that signals the brand's design seriousness; the actual problem it solves is the part that makes it indispensable.
Sacred Squirter 2.0
The artisan answer in the glass category. Yoni Pleasure Palace is a small Australian workshop and the Sacred Squirter 2.0 is its larger curved-glass G-spot piece. The glass is genuinely beautiful — Iridescent Gold and Midnight Black are the two colourways our editor would actually buy — and the curve is the most pronounced of the artisan-end pieces. The hand-finished feel is the trade-off for less exact unit-to-unit consistency.
Pure Wave
The bullet vibrator that earned its place on the design press's lookbook circuit. Vella's Pure Wave is finished in soft mint with gold accents, the silhouette is the closest thing this list has to costume jewellery, and the case it ships in is unmistakably designed for the bedside drawer of someone who has read this magazine. Quietly powerful; quietly pretty.
Pixii
The smallest piece in biird's Elements collection — petite, external, single-button, in a soft apricot finish. The Pixii is the piece for the buyer who finds even the Maude Vibe too much; it is the smallest credible vibe in the category and the easiest first-purchase recommendation. Body-safe silicone, USB-C rechargeable, ships in a soft pouch.
Pearlescence
The prettiest piece in the Glas catalogue. Pearlescence is hand-blown borosilicate finished in an iridescent pearl-on-cream — the visual draw is real, even if the curve and the case fall short of the editor's pick. A defensible budget alternative for buyers who specifically want glass and specifically want it sub-$70.
Bloom
The aspirational pick that closes the list. Heydaze is a London ceramics studio that, in 2024, started producing pleasure objects in the same matte glaze as their tableware — and the Bloom is the form that earned the most editorial attention. Heavier than expected, ceramic-on-ceramic finish, and shipped in tissue paper inside a pale-card box that resembles a wedding-list confirmation. The piece on this list most likely to be photographed for a future home magazine. Not the buy for someone's first piece. The buy for someone's tenth.
If you want only one
The honest editor's answer, having lived with most of these for some part of the past year: the Kalii, at $129. The case is included, the engineering is meaningfully better than its category, and — among objects you would deliberately leave out where a houseguest might see them — it is the one most likely to be mistaken, briefly, for a paperweight.
If you have already passed through that gateway and are looking for the next piece, the choice is between vibration (the Gii, in mint silicone) and air-pulse (the Namii 2). Both stay in our drawer. Neither apologises for being there.
P.S. The Kalii (No. 1) has sold out twice at its US retail listing in the last twelve months. The current restock is healthy but not abundant; if the listing shows it as available when you click through, the supply chain is in a good week.
Related from Lustre Journal
- I Threw Out 5 of My 6 Sex Toys After 30 Days With One Piece of Glass — the case for buying one beautiful object instead of six mediocre ones.
- Everything You Need to Know About the G-Spot — why our number-one pick is shaped the way it is.

Reader Comments · 4
Bookmarked. The Heydaze pick is the one I had not seen anywhere else; thank you for putting it on my radar. The Kalii ranking I'd already converged on after living with mine for four months.
The Ohnut inclusion is what made me trust the rest of the list. Most "pretty toy" roundups skip it because it isn't sexy on its own; this one didn't. Forwarding to my postpartum group.
As a former no-toys household — I would have laughed at this list two years ago. The Maude Vibe at #6 was my entry point. The Kalii is what I'm trying next.
The Iroha Ukidama section is the most beautifully written 60 words on a sex toy I have ever read. Tasha, you have made me want it.