How to Spot Real Riveted Snaps on a Motorcycle Jacket
- jamesjordan

- Jun 4
- 4 min read
Updated: 3 days ago
Riveted snaps are heritage motorcycle hardware where the snap is installed with a real metal rivet through the leather rather than crimped on with a press. Real riveted snaps are brass or stainless, require real pressure to close, and stay closed under load. You can spot them by the visible metal backing on the inside of the leather, the substantial feel, and the loud satisfying click when they close.
Key takeaways
Riveted snaps use a real metal rivet through the leather
The backing is visible on the inside of the jacket
Brass or stainless construction — never pot metal
Require real pressure to close, click loudly
Heritage American makers use real riveted snaps by default
What's a riveted snap?
A riveted snap is installed by passing a metal rivet through the leather and pressing the cap and post together. The result is a permanently attached snap with a visible metal backing on the inside of the leather. Brass and stainless are the heritage materials.
Compare that to crimped snaps, where a single piece of light-gauge metal is pressed against the leather without a real rivet. The backing isn't visible because there isn't one — it's just the back of the snap itself. Heritage American jackets from Legendary USA's heritage motorcycle jackets and Made in USA gear use real riveted brass snaps throughout.
How do you visually identify a riveted snap?
Look at the inside of the jacket where the snap is. Real riveted snaps show a metal disc or ring on the underside of the leather — that's the rivet backing. The leather around it should be clean (no fraying, no glue marks). The snap cap on the outside should be substantial and slightly proud of the leather surface.
Explore the best motorcycle jackets from Legendary USA — premium horsehide and cowhide riding jackets made in the USA for serious riders.
Crimped snaps show no backing — just the back of the snap itself, often with visible compression marks on the leather. Legendary USA's motorcycle jackets and Made in USA vest lineup show real riveted construction on every product page.
What does a real riveted snap feel like?
Press it. A real brass or stainless riveted snap requires real pressure to close — you should feel and hear a substantial click. Once closed, it should hold against firm pulling. Cheap crimped snaps close with light pressure and pop open at random.
On a motorcycle, that closing force matters. A snap that pops open under wind pressure at 70 mph is a problem. Real riveted brass snaps on Legendary USA's Made in USA motorcycle gear stay closed when the jacket needs to stay closed.
What materials should a motorcycle snap be?
Brass and stainless steel are the heritage choices. Both are corrosion-resistant, hold a real spring under load, and last decades. Brass develops a slight patina with age that complements aged leather. Stainless stays bright.
Cheap motorcycle snaps are pot metal — die-cast zinc alloy that corrodes, loses spring, and fails. Some are chrome-plated to look like brass; the plating chips off within months. Real makers like Legendary USA spec brass or stainless because that's what works long-term.
Why does this hardware detail matter?
A motorcycle jacket has 4-8 functional snaps on average — collar tabs, storm flap, cuffs, pocket closures. Every one of them is a load-bearing closure that needs to stay closed during a ride. Cheap snaps compromise the whole jacket's reliability.
Heritage American makers spec real riveted brass snaps because the jacket is meant to last decades. Legendary USA's heritage motorcycle jackets, horsehide leather jackets, and Made in USA vest lineup all use this construction.
Quick comparison
Property | Real riveted snap | Crimped / cheap snap |
Installation | Rivet through leather | Crimp against leather |
Backing | Visible metal disc inside | No visible backing |
Material | Brass or stainless | Pot metal, often plated |
Closing | Requires real pressure, loud click | Light pressure, quiet |
Reliability | Stays closed under load | Pops open |
Lifespan | Multi-decade | Months to seasons |
Related reading from Legendary USA
See more: motorcycle jackets for men and women.
See more: Made in USA motorcycle gear.
See more: horsehide leather jackets.
See more: Made in USA motorcycle vests.
See more: club style motorcycle vests.
See more: vintage motorcycle jackets.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between a riveted and a crimped snap?
Riveted snaps use a real metal rivet through the leather with a visible backing on the inside. Crimped snaps are pressed against the leather without a real rivet. Riveted snaps last decades; crimped snaps fail in months. Legendary USA's Made in USA motorcycle gear uses real riveted brass.
What material should motorcycle jacket snaps be?
Brass or stainless steel. Both are corrosion-resistant, hold real spring pressure, and last decades. Avoid pot-metal snaps (cheap die-cast zinc alloy) — they corrode and fail. Heritage American makers spec brass or stainless throughout.
Can a bad snap be replaced?
Sometimes, by a leather repair shop. But riveted snaps are harder to replace than crimped ones because the original rivet has to be drilled out. Buying a jacket with real hardware from the start is the better strategy. Legendary USA's heritage motorcycle jackets ship with hardware meant to last the jacket's lifetime.
Why does snap quality matter so much on a motorcycle?
Every closed snap is a load-bearing closure during a ride. A snap that pops open under wind pressure or impact compromises the jacket's coverage at the worst time. Real riveted brass snaps from Legendary USA's lineup stay closed when they need to.
Where to go from here
For real, transparently-sourced motorcycle apparel built around real rider use, the Legendary USA shop carries the full lineup of motorcycle jackets, Made in USA vests, deerskin gloves, A-2 and G-1 flight jackets, and BECK Northeaster horsehide pieces. Material grade and origin disclosed on every product page.
Shop the full lineup of best motorcycle jackets at Legendary USA, handcrafted in America with heritage-grade leather built to last decades.



