A leather jacket once worn by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang just went on auction, and it’s already fetching its estimated bid with more than a week to go until closing.
The “Jensen Jacket,” originally designed by Tom Ford, was put up for sale by Sotheby’s, which initially estimated the jacket’s worth to be between $40,000 and $60,000. Its current bid stands at $60,000.
It’s being auctioned as a “philanthropic initiative” by the venture capital fund Long Journey Ventures to benefit the Edge Institute, a nonprofit that, per its website, convenes people working in tech and science in “popup villages” to live together and “experiment towards a brighter future.”
The jacket’s sale comes as all eyes are turning to Sun Valley, the secretive annual retreat known as “summer camp for billionaires” that began on July 7. The conference will be a place for tech elites like Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, and Alex Karp to make deals behind closed doors—and to be endlessly photographed and analyzed for what they’re wearing, from their shoes to their hats.
Huang’s jacket is a reminder that, whether it’s Mark Zuckerberg’s gold chain or Sam Altman’s gaudy glasses, accessories in the tech bro sphere have a tendency to transcend from mere style choices to personal branding statements.

How a leather jacket became a symbol of the AI era
Huang’s black leather jacket, which he seems to own in many different cuts, has been a staple of his style for years. The jacket has appeared during Nvidia’s landmark product launches, at developer conferences, and even in one video of Huang eating noodles in Beijing.
Huang wore the jacket in question—which features his golden signature on the interior lining—during Hon Hai Tech Day in Taipei on October 18, 2023.
In a flowery summary included with the jacket’s auction page, Sotheby’s wrote of the style: “Instantly recognizable to audiences around the world, the ‘Jensen Jacket’ has come to be a relic of a simple belief: that the future is built by people brave enough to journey into the unknown before anyone else can see what they see.”
Fashion has always mattered for tech moguls, even for the many years when “anti-fashion” (best embodied by Steve Jobs’ iconic turtleneck and jeans uniform) was in vogue with what felt like the whole world’s C-suite. Even a tee or a polo shirt, when donned by someone like Altman or Musk, sends a message (namely, that the wearer is trying to look casual in a $600 top).
Recently, though, several tech giants have eschewed fashion minimalism to embrace the impact of their physical personal branding, including Mark Zuckerberg, who pivoted from hoodies to hypebeast t-shirts, gold chains, and a more on-trend hairdo, before landing in the front row at Prada; and Jeff Bezos, who’s swapped out his fleece vests for tailored suits and leather bomber jackets.
Huang is an example of a tech mogul who, perhaps inadvertently, has always had a recognizable style. Now, just as Jobs’ black turtleneck immediately evokes memories of a bygone 2000s tech era, the Jensen Jacket, Zuckerberg’s chain, and Bezos’ suits have turned into one of the standout visual symbols of the AI revolution.
As Sotheby’s put it, for both critics and fans alike, “This is not just a jacket.”