Skip to product information
AW14 Saint Laurent Paris Grey L01 Biker Leather Jacket

Saint Laurent’s L01, formally called the “Classic Motorcycle Jacket,” debuted with Hedi Slimane’s reboot of the house in 2012. It distilled the "Marlon Brando" Schott Perfecto into a sharp, skinny-cut luxury staple and represented a modern interpretation of the brand's 1966 biker style. The L01 quickly became a symbol of Slimane’s rock-inflected transformation of the house, encapsulated in the high-profile rebrand from “Yves Saint Laurent” to “Saint Laurent.”

Made in Italian lambskin, the L01 carried the hallmarks of a biker jacket such as an asymmetric front zip, snap-down lapels, epaulettes, zipper cuffs, and a coin pocket. Slimane refined these elements with sleek proportions that paired seamlessly with tailoring or denim. He did not reinvent the motorcycle jacket, but elevated it, turning a symbol of rebellion into a luxury archetype for a new generation.

Its impact stretched beyond design. Culturally, the L01 became shorthand for Slimane’s rock star uniform, seen across runways, campaigns, and celebrity wardrobes. Commercially, it marked a turning point for Saint Laurent, helping the house more than double its revenue during Slimane’s tenure. The L01 functioned as both a fashion statement and a business strategy.

Slimane’s approach, however, was not without controversy. Critics argued that by narrowing the brand’s identity to a youth-driven rock aesthetic, he risked flattening Yves Saint Laurent’s broader legacy. The question remained whether the house’s heritage had been sacrificed for a concise image built on desirability and rock codes.

This grey L01 jacket hails from his AW14 collection, which offers a useful lens for this debate. The show extended Slimane’s vision of youth culture through references to 1960s mod, 1970s glam, and 1990s grunge, shaped into a tightly edited wardrobe. While it leaned heavily on rock-inflected attitude, the collection also drew on elements recognizably linked to Yves Saint Laurent: sharp tailoring, nods to the 1960s silhouette, and evening glamour. Suggesting that Slimane did not fully abandon the house’s heritage but instead integrated it through his own vocabulary.

Measurements:

Length 56cm
Shoulders 39cm
Ptp 43cm
Sleeve 59cm
Hem 40cm

Goes well with...