Is a shirasaya daisho set different from a standard fitted set?
Updated Feb 2026
Yes, significantly. A shirasaya (白鞘) is a plain, unadorned wooden mount — typically made from ho wood or rosewood — with no tsuba, no menuki, and no decorative ito wrapping. The word translates roughly to "white scabbard," and the style was historically used as a storage mount to keep a blade safe between periods of use, rather than as a wearing mount. A shirasaya daisho set therefore presents a very different aesthetic compared to a fully mounted set: it is minimalist, refined, and almost meditative in its simplicity. Collectors drawn to the blade itself — its geometry, grain, and hamon — often prefer shirasaya mounts because nothing competes visually with the steel. A fully mounted daisho set, by contrast, offers the complete visual drama of tsuba, same (ray skin), ito, and lacquered saya, which is more representative of how the swords were actually worn.