This Designer Just Built the Sleep Device Insomniacs Always Wanted

We’ve all been there. It’s 2:47 AM, and you’re staring at your ceiling, mentally calculating how many hours of sleep you’ll get if you fall asleep right now. Spoiler alert: that math never helps. Designer JeJun Park clearly understands this universal struggle, because Re:M tackles the insomnia problem from a completely fresh angle.

At first glance, Re:M looks like it wandered out of a minimalist’s dream. It’s got that soft baby blue finish that feels calming just to look at, and an oval speaker face that tilts upward like it’s ready to have a conversation with you. But here’s where it gets interesting. This isn’t just another white noise machine or smart alarm clock trying to do everything at once. It’s what Park calls a “sleep care object,” which is honestly a much better way to think about it.

Designer: JeJun Park

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The most brilliant design choice? Those numbers you obsessively check at 3 AM? Gone. Instead of a traditional clock face with digits taunting you about lost sleep, Re:M shows time through just a simple dot for the hour and a line for minutes. It sounds almost too minimal, but that’s exactly the point. When you’re not fixating on the exact time, you stop doing that awful mental math about your dwindling sleep window. You just… let go. The clock becomes ambient, flowing, present but not demanding your attention.

The whole device is built around this philosophy of removing anxiety triggers. Those aluminum dome speakers aren’t just there to look pretty (though they definitely do). They pump out everything from white noise to nature sounds, creating an audio cocoon that blocks out the neighbor’s dog or street traffic. You know that feeling when you’re camping and the gentle sounds of a stream or rustling leaves just knock you out? That’s what Re:M is going for, minus the mosquitoes and uncomfortable sleeping bag.

What really sets this apart from other sleep gadgets is how thoughtfully Park has considered every interaction. Notice there’s basically one button on the entire device? That’s because all the fiddly controls live in the companion app. You’re not fumbling with multiple buttons in the dark or accidentally blasting sound at full volume. The power button is tucked discreetly out of sight, and that side dial handles volume adjustments with precision that touchscreens could never match. It connects via Bluetooth, so you can fine-tune everything from your phone during the day, then just tap the device to turn it on at night.

Even the wake-up experience got a redesign. Instead of a jarring alarm, Re:M gradually increases both nature sounds and a gentle brightening light. It’s like having a sunrise on your nightstand, coaxing you awake instead of startling you into consciousness. Anyone who’s ever been jolted awake by a blaring alarm knows how that sets the tone for your entire day. The practical touches are there too. USB-C charging means you can power it with the same cable as your phone or laptop, and a small LED dot tells you the charging status without being intrusive. The device stands on a stable base with subtle grip pads, so it’s not going anywhere if you reach for it groggily at night.

What I really appreciate about Re:M is that it doesn’t try to be everything to everyone. It’s not tracking your REM cycles, syncing with seventeen other devices, or promising to revolutionize your entire life. It’s simply designed to help you fall asleep more easily and wake up more gently. That singular focus feels almost revolutionary when every product seems to wants to be your all-in-one solution. Park has created something that addresses a real problem (we’re all sleeping terribly) with thoughtful design rather than more technology. Re:M proves that sometimes the best solution isn’t adding features, but carefully removing the things that stress us out. And honestly? In our overstimulated, always-on world, that might be the most innovative thing of all.

The post This Designer Just Built the Sleep Device Insomniacs Always Wanted first appeared on Yanko Design.

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