Leather
In BDSM culture, calling someone a "leather" refers to a group of people who wears leather gear and belongs to the leather community, a tradition rooted in post-WWII biker and queer subcultures. The leather scene is built around trust, power exchange, and shared rituals - not just play roles - which is why people proudly identify as being “leather” as part of who they are in the kink world
Origins of the Term
The label “leather” in kink emerged from post-World War II queer and biker cultures. Returning servicemembers in the 1940s–1950s began wearing protective motorcycle gear as symbols of toughness and rebellion. These pieces soon became shorthand for an underground gay subculture centered on BDSM, brotherhood, and ritualized power exchange. Over the 1960s and ’70s, “leather” evolved beyond clothing into a shared identity, complete with bars, clubs, contests, protocols, and kink practices .
Related Roles
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