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Not your usual leather
ETimes | May 17, 2026 11:39 PM CST

Luxury fashion is blending leather with different textures into a single, seamless garment. Across international runways, brands are combining leather with denim, wool, and technical fabrics to create “material hybrids” that blur the boundaries between contrasting materials. One recent example that sparked conversation online is Ferrari ’s leather-and-wool bomber jacket, crafted using an ancient needle-felting technique that merges wool fibres directly into leather without visible stitching. Fashion publication La Conceria described the effect as a design where “the leather gives way to wool in a seamless gradient”.
Explaining the appeal behind these hybrid garments, Jasminum Kaur says, “Mixed textures add depth and instantly make a garment stand out. But blending leather with softer fabrics requires precise craftsmanship and finishing to make the piece look seamless and luxurious.”

Blending materials on the runway
- Ferrari’s leather-and-wool bomber jacket — where soft wool fibres gradually melt into polished leather through a needle-felting technique — blends contrasting textures so seamlessly that the garment appears almost fluid in composition.
- Loewe’s SS24 menswear runway featured a jacket that blended glossy leather with suede-like denim textures, creating an ombré illusion in which the two materials appeared to melt seamlessly into each other.
- As noted by Harper's Bazaar, outerwear became the standout at Bottega Veneta’s FW26 show under Louise Trotter, especially a sculptural peacoat that balanced sharp structure with soft leather craftsmanship. The brand’s exploration of leather illusion is also visible in its bag collection, where ultra-thin strips were handwoven without stitches to mimic cane and basket-weave textures.
- Earlier, in its SS23 collection, Bottega Veneta under Matthieu Blazy presented garments that played tricks on the eye. Blazy showcased leather trousers designed to replicate the look of jeans. “From the perverse banality of the everyday nubuck looks to the eroticism of ultra-sophistication through tailoring... the whole world in a small room,” Blazy, then creative director of Bottega Veneta, told V Magazine.
- Yohji Yamamoto explored similar ideas in his 2016 runway collection, showcasing gradient garments in which leather appeared to gradually fade into cotton and wool textures.



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