2026 Spring Fashion: Why Colorful Leather Jackets Are the Must-Have Item This Season
Daniel Kim Views
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Color hunting—the habit of spotting colors in everyday life and sharing them on social media—has jumped from feeds into the fashion market. With shoppers increasingly opting for bold pieces, color has become a primary shopping filter. This spring, leather—traditionally a fall staple—has been freshly reimagined in vibrant hues and is emerging as one of the season’s standout trends.

Shoppers’ interest shows up in search behavior. From Feb. 1 to March 25, LF Mall saw searches for “leather jacket” jump 146% year over year, while searches for “leather jumper” rose 201%. Unlike earlier seasons, bright colors and lightweight leather pieces now dominate top-seller lists, signaling growing demand for what the industry calls color leather.
Leather’s role has shifted. Once valued mainly as a heavy, classic outer layer, it’s now appearing as lighter spring-ready jumpers and short jackets that add instant energy to an outfit rather than merely serving as a neutral basic. The wider use of suede and soft leather has also lowered the barrier to wearing color.
Men’s brand Maestro is leaning into that shift. For the 26SS season, the label increased leather styles by 30% and boosted inventory by 60%. It doubled the number of vivid leather options—think yellow, violet, and sky blue—to meet changing tastes.

The market response has been strong. By broadening color palettes, diversifying materials and designs, and improving construction and fit, total leather-item sales from Jan. 1 to March 25 climbed 98% year over year. Retailers expect many leather styles to sell out before the season ends.
One standout item, the Lamb Embo Collar Blouson, uses premium lambskin with two-tone dyeing to create a rich, layered finish—and it’s already hard to find in brick-and-mortar stores.
The color-leather wave is clear in women’s wear, too. Daks expanded its color-leather offerings roughly fourfold for 26SS, adding shades like pink, cream, camel, and khaki. It also diversified silhouettes—short, midi, lightweight quilted lined pieces, and vests—so shoppers have spring-appropriate leather options across styles.

At French-contemporary label Atte Vanessa Bruno, a taupe-toned beige faux-leather jacket went into reorders during its first week on LF Mall and quickly became a bestseller—selling more than 50% better than the black version of the same style.
A goat-leather pink short jumper is also flying off shelves and is expected to sell out this season, proving that colored leather is translating into real sales.

An LF spokesperson said, “Choosing a color has become a core way people express taste, so color differentiation is growing more important even for familiar items. In categories like leather—where shape and material are similar—the impression color creates becomes a key part of design competitiveness, and we’re seeing that shift the traditional, black-centered consumption pattern.”











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