Casey reads traditional: rolled arms and a chair-scale frame that looks more like a reading chair than a sleeper. At 44.5 inches wide it slots into a home office or a small guest room where a full sofa won't fit. The hook is what's underneath: a modern mechanism in a quiet shell.
The Hybrid function is what makes Casey work as more than a chair. You set the back cushions aside, lift the front of the seat, and the back lays flat in two motions: no removing the seat cushion, no metal frame to drag. It's a manual conversion, not power. The whole thing happens in the same footprint the chair takes up sitting, plus the clearance for the bed itself to extend forward.
The bed is a 30 by 80 inch cot: single sleeper, no second occupant. The mattress is built in at five inches thick, a cold-cured high-density foam pad rather than a removable spring or innerspring. That's the trade-off Casey makes for fitting inside a chair frame: you get a real sleep surface rated for nightly use, not a fold-up wire grid, but you don't get the depth of a queen mattress. For an adult guest staying a week, it's honest.
The frame is solid spruce with mortise-and-tenon joinery and birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified. Made in the EU, made to order, with four to six weeks from order to delivery. The upholstery catalog runs to over a hundred options across fabric and leather; you'll choose at point of sale.
Casey is for the apartment with a home office that doubles as a one-person guest room, or a den that needs a sleeper without a sofa's footprint. If you need to sleep two adults, step up to the Casey full XL or queen loveseat. Choose Casey if you want the traditional rolled-arm silhouette; choose the Aspen cot chair if you want a cleaner contemporary line with the same 30-by-80 cot underneath.