What is the difference between a chrysanthemum tsuba and a skull tsuba design?
Updated Mar 2026
The tsuba is the hand guard seated between the blade and handle, and its design is one of the most expressive elements in Japanese sword fitting. A chrysanthemum tsuba draws from classical Japanese floral symbolism — the chrysanthemum has historical associations with the imperial family and seasonal motifs in traditional art. It reads as refined and formally rooted in Japanese aesthetic tradition. A skull tsuba, by contrast, pulls from a more contemporary and internationally influenced design vocabulary, often favored by collectors who want a piece with an edge of dark visual character. Neither is more "authentic" in terms of construction — both can be well-made fittings — but they signal very different collecting sensibilities and suit different display contexts.