
In celebrity style circles, Selena Gomez's black jacket collection is the stuff of legends. No two Penny Lane coats or leather jackets are identical, leaving lots of space in her closet—especially the workwear section—for new additions. At this point, they're as synonymous with Rare Beauty's aesthetic as Gomez herself. For proof, see her a crisp black blazer at the brand's April 1 photoshoot, which instantly elevated her wide-leg jeans and Rare Beauty eye patches.
Hours after debuting backless Mary Janes, the hybrid shoe trend was MIA from Gomez's on-set outfit. She switched into CEO mode with a cropped, office-ready jacket, which seemed to be collarless above monochrome buttons. Its hip-hugging hem stopped right in line with her trend-defying denim.

Not only were the dark-wash jeans held surprisingly high, the legs slid past cigarette, stovepipe, and even bootcut territory, going straight to wide-legs. Sure, fellow denim advocates Hailey Bieber and Kendall Jenner aren't wearing jeans this wide right now. But that doesn't mean they're outdated. On the contrary: Bottega Veneta, Coach, and Stella McCartney initiated a wide-leg revival on Spring 2026 runways.


Gomez and her black jacket collection aren't solely loyal to wide-leg jeans, though. This time last year, she applied the same outfit formula in New York City, starting with a leather, croc-embossed blazer. The Only Murders actor stacked its glossy patent hems over borderline-cigarette Celine jeans, which could join today's street style scene, no questions asked. The four-figure legs were a few shades lighter than her latest pair, not to mention half the width. Even styling them with pointy Jimmy Choo pumps was a move straight out of 2026.

Gomez's affinity for wearing jeans and black jackets together can be traced back decades. (Seriously, a circa-2010 Gomez zoomed from one Disney Channel event to another in the same dynamic duo.) Few outfit formulas stand the test of time this stylishly. So whether you wear jeans and a black jacket now, or five years from now, they're worth the investment.