Product Details

The blade of this katana is forged from spring steel and finished to a polished chrome surface, running a full 40.5 inches in total length with a 1.26-inch width at the base. The full-tang construction extends the steel continuously through the handle, giving the piece a solid, well-balanced feel in hand. Explore more options in our collection of Spring Steel Japanese Samurai Swords.

The tsuka is built over a wooden core wrapped in green ray-skin, then bound with black cord in a tight diamond pattern. Small green diamond-shaped panels show through the wrap at each cross point, creating a two-tone visual rhythm along the full length of the grip. Black alloy fittings at the fuchi and kashira complete the handle assembly with consistent dark metalwork.

The tsuba is one of the most eye-catching elements of this piece - a round gold-tone alloy guard with a dense geometric honeycomb cutout pattern across its face. The openwork design casts subtle shadow on the habaki below it, and the warm gold finish contrasts sharply against the black handle and chrome blade.

The saya is crafted from hardwood and finished with lacquer in a deep black base. Across its surface, broad sweeping strokes of teal and green create a wave-motion effect that shifts in the light - no two sayas carry an identical pattern. A black sageo cord is secured at the kurikata with a traditional knot, and matching black-and-gold hardware runs along the scabbard's length. For more katana options in this style, browse our High Quality Japanese Katana collection.

Specifications: overall length 40.5 in, blade width 1.26 in, weight 2.88 lb, shipping weight 4 lb. Koshirae-style fittings throughout. Sword stand not included.

  • Blade forged from spring steel with a full-tang construction, hand-finished to a polished chrome edge - total length 40.5 in, width 1.26 in, weight 2.88 lb.
  • Tsuka wrapped in black cord over green ray-skin with a diamond pattern, accented by black alloy fittings for a secure, traditional koshirae grip.
  • Gold-tone geometric tsuba with an openwork honeycomb design - a bold visual anchor between blade and handle, finished in alloy with fine surface detailing.
  • Hardwood lacquer saya in black with sweeping green wave brushwork - each scabbard carries its own layered pattern, secured with a black sageo cord.
  • Complete koshirae-style fittings include matching black-and-gold kojiri and kurikata hardware, with a black sageo tied in a traditional knot at the koiguchi.

Specification

Product Specifications
Item NumberTK-JP-G10569
Primary ColorBlack
Primary MaterialSpring Steel
Saya ColorBlack-green
Saya MaterialHardwood Lacquer
Saya ThemeWave
Tsuka ColorBlack-green
Nagasa ColorChrome
Sageo ColorBlack
Tsuba ColorGold
Tsuba ThemeGeometric
StyleKoshirae
Dimensions40.5 x 1.3 Inches
Weight2.9 Pounds
Packing Size42 x 4 x 4 Inches
Shipping Weight4.0 Pounds

Frequently Asked Questions

What steel is this katana blade made from?
The blade is forged from spring steel with a full-tang construction, finished to a polished chrome surface. It runs 40.5 in overall with a 1.26 in width and the complete piece weighs 2.88 lb.
What does the tsuba look like on this katana?
The tsuba is a round gold-tone alloy guard featuring a geometric honeycomb openwork cutout pattern across its face. The warm gold finish creates a strong contrast against the black handle and polished chrome blade.
How is the saya decorated on this katana?
The hardwood lacquer saya has a deep black base with broad sweeping strokes of teal and green applied to create a wave-motion effect. A black sageo cord is knotted at the kurikata, and black-and-gold hardware runs along the scabbard.

Customer Reviews(1)

Seth Burns West Virginia, United States
Dec 14, 2022 20:03

Very well made for the price, fairly sharp, I have stress tested the edge against thick steel cable, very little wearing occurred to the edge and required only a little bit of sharpening to repair, overall a very good, durable sword. Not sure if it rlly is spring steel, it doesn't seem to act like it but whatever it is, it seems to do a good job. Well done