What is a shirasaya mounting and why does it matter?
Updated Feb 2026
A shirasaya is a plain, unadorned wooden mounting consisting of a straight wooden handle (tsuka) and matching wooden scabbard (saya), traditionally used in Japan for blade storage and preservation rather than everyday carry. Unlike the wrapped and fitted mountings seen on standard katanas, a shirasaya has no ito wrapping, no tsuba, and no metal fittings — giving it a stark, elegant appearance that emphasizes the blade itself. The O-Ren Ishii model in this collection uses a shirasaya-style mounting accented with a silver flower handle, which reflects O-Ren's refined, minimalist screen persona. For collectors, shirasaya-mounted katanas are prized for their understated sophistication and are a popular display choice in curated collections where the blade's form is meant to speak for itself.