
BECK has been building leather goods in the United States through decades of offshore competition, market disruption, and the contraction of domestic manufacturing that took many American workshop brands with it. They are still here. The workshops are still running. The horsehide is still American. Understanding why requires understanding what BECK decided to be — and what they decided not to be.
What Staying Domestic Required
Staying in domestic manufacturing while most of the leather goods industry moved offshore required BECK to compete on something other than price. Price competition with offshore production is a race that American workshops cannot win on volume. BECK chose a different competition: material quality, construction knowledge, and the long-term performance of a product built to be ridden in for ten years rather than one.
That choice meant accepting that their jackets would cost more than offshore alternatives. It meant staying on the other side of a purchasing decision that many buyers make on price first. It meant building a customer base that values what horsehide does over time rather than how quickly the jacket feels comfortable on day one.
They were right to make that choice. The riders who buy BECK horsehide are not buying a jacket for one season. They're buying the jacket they expect to ride in for the next decade, and the construction behind it reflects that expectation.
The Horsehide and the Craft Are Inseparable
You cannot separate BECK's product quality from their knowledge of horsehide. The way BECK works with this material — the sourcing, the tanning specifications, the cutting and stitching techniques calibrated for a dense, resistant hide — is the product of decades of accumulated practice. It is institutional knowledge that cannot be replicated by ordering horsehide from an offshore supplier and putting it through a cowhide production line.
The BECK TM-732 Northeaster Horsehide Jacket is the concentrated output of that knowledge. Every decision in its construction reflects something learned from making the same type of product from the same material over a very long time. The BECK 666 Distressed Café Racer applies the same underlying knowledge to a different silhouette and aesthetic treatment.
What This Means for a Rider Buying a BECK Jacket Today
When you buy a BECK horsehide jacket, you're not buying from a company that recently decided to offer horsehide as a premium product feature. You're buying from a manufacturer whose entire professional identity is built around this specific material in this specific manufacturing context. The people who built your jacket have done this for a long time. The methods they used have been refined over decades of feedback from riders who wore the results.
That background is present in the jacket on the hanger before you put it on. It becomes more apparent as the jacket breaks in — in how it holds its shape, how it ages, how it responds to conditioning, and how it looks at year five compared to year one. The American leather tradition is not a marketing claim about BECK. It is the actual origin of what makes their products different.
Available Through Legendary USA
BECK horsehide jackets and vests are available through Legendary USA as part of the authorized dealer relationship that puts these American-made products in front of riders who are looking for them. The BECK 566 Horsehide Vest extends the same material and construction quality to vest form for riders who want the horsehide tradition in a lighter-weight riding layer.
All BECK products at Legendary USA are available through the complete gear collection. The American leather tradition they represent has been built over seven decades of showing up in the same workshops with the same materials and the same commitment to doing it right.







