What is the Best Material for a Bomber Jacket? Pros and Cons
The bomber jacket comes in more materials than any other jacket silhouette: leather, nylon, wool, suede, satin, cotton. Each has specific properties that determine warmth, durability, aging, and the contexts it works in. Here is the honest comparison.
Choosing a bomber jacket material is choosing how the jacket will behave over time, not just how it looks today. A nylon bomber and a full-grain leather bomber may look similar in a product photograph. After three years of regular wear, they are completely different objects. One has degraded, the other has improved. Understanding what each material does over time is the most important factor in making the right choice for your needs and budget.

Full-Grain Leather: The Long-Term Standard
Full-grain leather is the outer, intact grain layer of the hide, the densest, most durable, and most water-resistant part of the animal skin. For a bomber jacket, full-grain lambskin at 0.6 to 0.8mm is the premium choice: it provides genuine wind resistance, moderate insulation, and a surface that develops a natural patina through wear.
The key property that distinguishes full-grain leather from every other bomber material is that it improves with age rather than degrading. The leather softens to the wearer's specific movement patterns, develops a surface character that reflects actual use, and becomes more individual rather than more worn-looking. A full-grain leather bomber at ten years of regular wear is a better object than it was on the day it was purchased.
- Improves with age, develops patina
- Excellent wind resistance
- 20+ year lifespan with correct care
- Genuine water resistance
- Moulds to the wearer over time
- Material quality visible and tactile
- Higher upfront cost
- Requires conditioning maintenance
- Heavier than nylon alternatives
- Not suitable for machine washing
Nylon: The Original MA-1 Material
The MA-1 flight jacket, introduced in 1959, was made in nylon, a choice driven by military requirements for lightweight, packable outerwear that could be worn in pressurised cockpits where the heavy leather A-2 was impractical. The nylon bomber is therefore the historically authentic material for the MA-1 silhouette specifically.
For civilian use, nylon provides excellent packability and low weight but limited durability over multi-year use. The material is resistant to light rain but not genuinely waterproof, and degrades through UV exposure, abrasion, and repeated washing in ways that leather does not. A nylon bomber at five years of regular wear typically shows significant fading, seam degradation, and surface wear. It is the right choice for a specific lightweight streetwear function, not for an investment purchase.
Suede: The Soft Alternative
Suede leather (the napped inner surface of the hide) provides a softer, warmer-toned alternative to smooth full-grain leather in a bomber silhouette. It carries the natural material properties of leather (genuine durability, wind resistance, aging character) while reading visually softer and more approachable.
The limitation of suede in a bomber context is care requirement. Suede is more vulnerable to water damage and staining than smooth leather, requires a protector spray before wear, and needs specialist cleaning for significant soiling. For someone willing to manage this, a suede bomber provides a unique combination of warmth, visual softness, and long-term material quality. For someone who wants low-maintenance outerwear, smooth full-grain leather is more practical.
Wool and Varsity Blends
Wool-body bombers, often with leather sleeves in the varsity jacket tradition, provide excellent warmth and a different silhouette register from leather or nylon. They read as more collegiate and less streetwear, and provide genuine cold-weather insulation that nylon cannot match.
The aging profile of wool blends is less favourable than leather: wool pills, thins, and stretches over time in ways that leather does not. A quality wool bomber will last eight to twelve years with reasonable care, considerably less than a full-grain leather equivalent at a similar price point.
| Material | Warmth | Durability | Aging | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full-grain leather | Good (wind-blocking) | 20+ years | Improves, develops patina | Investment, everyday wear |
| Suede leather | Moderate | 10-15 years (needs care) | Develops character | Style, mild weather |
| Nylon (MA-1 style) | Light | 3-7 years | Degrades, fades | Streetwear, lightweight use |
| Wool blend | Excellent | 8-12 years | Pills, thins over time | Cold weather, formal context |
| Satin / silk-look | Minimal | 2-5 years | Snags, degrades | Evening wear, specific occasions |
| Cotton canvas | Light-moderate | 5-8 years | Fades, softens | Summer, casual wear |
Edinburgh Dark Brown Hooded Bomber
Full-grain lambskin with a removable hood. A bomber built for every season.
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Harrington Cognac Wax Bomber
Warm cognac wax leather. The Harrington silhouette with a rich, aged finish.
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The Honest Verdict
For a bomber jacket that is worn regularly and expected to last: full-grain leather is the only material that improves over time rather than degrading. For a lightweight, packable bomber for occasional wear: nylon is the appropriate choice. For warm-weather or evening-specific wear: cotton canvas or satin serve specific contextual purposes. The material decision should be made on the basis of expected use frequency and lifespan requirement, not on upfront cost alone. See also our detailed guide on faux leather vs real leather and our breakdown of lambskin vs cowhide vs goatskin.
Ask one question before purchasing: how long do I intend to wear this jacket regularly? If the answer is one to two years, nylon or cotton is appropriate. If the answer is five years or more, full-grain leather is the only material with a lifespan and aging trajectory that justifies the investment.