The Most Collectible Motorcycle Jackets Ever Made
- jamesjordan

- 8 hours ago
- 3 min read
Quick answer: The most collectible motorcycle jackets share three traits: genuine horsehide, a heritage maker (names like Schott and Buco), and original condition. Horsehide drives collectibility because it lasts and patinas like nothing else. To buy a future classic new, look to genuine horsehide jackets like the BECK 666 and 732 from Legendary USA.
Why do some motorcycle jackets sell for many times their original price decades later, while others end up in a donation bin? Collectibility in leather jackets is not random - it follows a clear logic built on material, maker and condition.
Trait 1: Horsehide is the collector leather
Almost every truly collectible vintage motorcycle jacket is horsehide, and that is no coincidence. Horsehide dense fiber structure lets it survive decades, and instead of merely wearing out it develops a patina that collectors prize as a record of the jacket life. A cowhide jacket from the same era is far less likely to have survived in wearable condition or to have aged with the same character. Horsehide is, quite literally, the leather that lasts long enough to become collectible.
Trait 2: A heritage maker
Collectibility attaches to names with history. Schott NYC, founded in 1913 and creator of the Perfecto in the late 1920s, produced some of the most iconic and sought-after motorcycle jackets ever made. Buco, the mid-century Detroit-associated brand, made horsehide jackets that now command high prices on the vintage market. The pattern is consistent: jackets from makers who built genuine, durable gear in a recognizable style hold and grow in value, because provenance and craftsmanship are part of what collectors pay for.
Trait 3: Condition and originality
Among surviving examples, condition separates a grail jacket from a project. Collectors pay the most for original hardware, intact seams, supple (un-cracked) leather and honest, earned patina. Replaced zippers, repaired panels and dried-out leather all reduce value. The cruel irony is that the jackets worn hardest - the ones with the best stories - are often the ones in the worst condition, which is why pristine originals are so rare and so expensive.
Collectibility factor
Why it matters
Horsehide leather
Survives decades, patinas with character
Heritage maker
Provenance and recognizable craftsmanship
Original condition
Original hardware and uncracked leather
Authentic patina
Earned wear tells the jacket story
Rarity
Few survive in wearable, original shape
How to buy a future classic - new
You do not have to chase a fragile, expensive original to own a jacket built on the same principles. The features that make vintage jackets collectible - genuine horsehide, a heritage maker, durable construction - are exactly what defines the current BECK Northeaster Flying Togs collection. Buy a 666, 732 or 999 new, and you get sound leather, working hardware and a correct fit, plus the chance to put the patina on it yourself over the next few decades.
Start with genuine horsehide - the leather that lasts and patinas.
Choose a heritage pattern from a maker that builds to last.
Buy it new so condition is a non-issue, then ride it hard.
Care for the leather so it ages into character rather than damage.
Buy a future classic
Start with genuine horsehide in the BECK collection at Legendary USA - the 666, 732 and 999.
Frequently asked questions
What makes a motorcycle jacket collectible?
Three things: genuine horsehide (which survives and patinas), a heritage maker with provenance like Schott or Buco, and original condition - uncracked leather, original hardware and authentic earned wear.
Why are horsehide jackets the most collectible?
Because horsehide dense fiber structure lets jackets survive for decades and develop a prized patina, rather than wearing out.
Which brands made the most collectible motorcycle jackets?
Heritage makers such as Schott NYC - founded in 1913 and creator of the Perfecto - and Buco, the mid-century Detroit-associated brand whose horsehide jackets are highly prized on the vintage market today.
Can I buy a jacket now that will become collectible?
You can buy one built on the same principles: genuine horsehide, a heritage pattern and durable construction. A current BECK 732 or 999 fits that description and lets you build the patina yourself.
Where can I buy a genuine horsehide jacket?
Through Legendary USA, which carries the current BECK horsehide jackets, including the 666, 732, 777 and 999.


