What makes a dragon katana different from a standard katana in terms of fittings and construction?
Updated Feb 2026
A dragon katana is distinguished primarily by its themed hardware — every component of the fittings is designed to carry the dragon motif cohesively rather than as a superficial add-on. The tsuba guard is typically cast or forged in brass, alloy, or iron with a sculpted dragon form, often with fine scale and claw detailing. Menuki ornaments embedded beneath the handle wrap also take dragon shapes, adding thematic continuity even where the eye barely reaches. Blade engravings — known as horimono — may feature a carved dragon running along the flat of the blade (ji) toward the tip. Beyond the decorative layer, the underlying construction follows the same standards as non-themed katanas: full-tang blade, genuine high-carbon or Damascus steel, ray-skin (sameē) handle base, and cord-wrapped tsuka. The dragon theme is an artistic overlay on top of a properly constructed collectible sword, not a compromise of the underlying craftsmanship.