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Hideyoshi Legacy Hand-Forged Samurai Sword - Black and Gold

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54.00


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Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword - Black & Gold

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The Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword brings classic katana lines into your collection with hand-forged 1045 high carbon steel and a razor-sharp edge. A curved, polished blade with bo-hi meets a black saya capped by a gold crest and an openwork floral tsuba. The rayskin tsuka under tight black wrap gives this 41" samurai sword a confident, traditional grip. Whether you’re displaying Japanese steel or rounding out a training set, this piece delivers the look and feel of a disciplined warrior’s sidearm.

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Step Into the Lineage of Steel

The first thing you notice with the Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword isn’t just the shine of the polished blade — it’s the way the whole 41-inch profile settles into your hands. The curve, the bo-hi, the way the black saya and gold crest line up with the floral tsuba — this isn’t fantasy metal. It’s a hand-forged 1045 high carbon steel katana built to sit comfortably beside serious Japanese sword collections.

While this site is all about putting a butterfly knife for sale in the right hands, the mentality is the same here: real steel, real balance, honest materials. This Hideyoshi samurai sword earns its spot the same way a respected balisong does — by backing its look with construction that makes sense.

Traditional Samurai Sword Craft With Modern Collectors in Mind

This hand-forged 1045 high carbon blade gives the Hideyoshi its backbone. 1045 is a proven mid-carbon steel: tough enough for functional edges, forgiving enough that it isn’t brittle wall-hanger mystery metal. The long, curved single edge follows classic katana geometry, with a fuller (bo-hi) running the spine to lighten the blade and sharpen the sound of the cut.

From the gold-colored habaki at the base of the blade to the floral openwork tsuba, everything reads as deliberate, not loud. Black dominates the saya and tsuka, while gold accents pick out the crest, guard, and hardware — the same disciplined color approach that makes a good balisong feel serious instead of flashy.

Hardware Details Collectors Actually Care About

Collectors of Japanese swords are just as detail-obsessed as any balisong community. They don’t want vague claims; they want to know what’s under the wrap and how the fittings are laid out. The Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword delivers on those expectations with transparent material and construction cues.

Tsuka: Rayskin Core, Tight Black Wrap

The grip (tsuka) runs a traditional profile, wrapped in black cord over off-white rayskin (samegawa). That classic diamond pattern isn’t just visual tradition; it creates alternating grip points along the handle so your hand locks in naturally at the right angles. Rayskin panels add subtle texture under the ito, helping keep the grip from feeling slick when moving between cuts or kata.

Tsuba and Fittings: Floral Openwork, Gold Highlights

The tsuba uses an openwork floral motif with gold accents that pop cleanly against the darker metal. Instead of going over the top, the design sits in that sweet spot: ornate enough to stand out in a display, restrained enough to feel like something a real officer might have carried. A gold-colored habaki locks the blade into the guard and adds another layer of visual contrast at the base of the edge.

The Saya: Understated Black With a Crest of Authority

The black saya is finished in a matte or satin sheen — more warrior, less mirror. A gold crest-style emblem near the mouth calls back to family mon and unit markings. The sageo cord is tied cleanly around the saya, and the metal kojiri end cap adds durability where scabbards tend to get knocked and bumped.

When racked on a stand or mounted in a collection beside your favorite balisong for sale, the visual story is clear: this is a traditional, disciplined katana aesthetic — black base, controlled gold highlights, no unnecessary noise.

From Dojo Floor to Display Wall

While the Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword is an obvious display piece, the 1045 high carbon steel and sharpened edge mean it isn’t just visual. For martial arts practitioners who work with live-blade kata or want a dedicated, hand-forged 1045 piece for light cutting practice, this katana slots in as a dependable mid-carbon option.

For pure collectors, the appeal lands in the combination of elements: floral openwork tsuba, rayskin tsuka, black-and-gold color discipline, and a clean, full-length silhouette. It’s the sort of piece that sits well between more ornate show blades and stripped-down training iai-to, bridging both aesthetics cleanly.

What Balisong Buyers Want to Know

Are butterfly knives legal to buy?

Legality on any edged tool — whether you’re hunting down a butterfly knife for sale or adding a samurai sword to your rack — always comes down to local and state law. In many U.S. states, owning a butterfly knife (balisong) at home is legal, but carrying one concealed or in public can be restricted. A few states treat balisongs like switchblades and ban them outright.

  • Generally more permissive states (like Texas, Arizona, Utah, Idaho) allow ownership and open carry of balisongs and larger blades.
  • Mixed or restricted states (such as California, New York, Massachusetts) often limit blade length, folding type, or how you can carry a balisong.
  • Some local cities or counties add additional rules on top of state law.

Samurai swords and katana are usually treated as large fixed blades or collectibles; home ownership is broadly legal in most states, but public carry can fall under dangerous weapon or length restrictions. Laws change often, and specific rules can vary by city, so always check your current state and local statutes or consult an attorney if you’re unsure before buying or carrying a balisong or sword.

What’s the difference between a butterfly knife trainer and a live blade?

In the balisong world, the split is simple: a butterfly knife trainer has a dull, unsharpened blade (often with holes or cutouts) so you can learn tricks, build muscle memory, and work on flow without slicing your hands open. A live blade balisong is sharpened and built for cutting, carry, or combative practice.

Trainers prioritize safe flipping and smooth action; live blades add edge geometry and cutting performance to the mix. Both still rely on honest pivot hardware, handle material, and balance — the same fundamentals that separate a quality samurai sword from a wall hanger.

Is this butterfly knife good for learning to flip?

If you’re specifically hunting a balisong for sale to learn flipping, you want a trainer with neutral balance, predictable handle weight, and reliable pivots — not a decorative live blade. This Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword isn’t a butterfly knife; it’s a full-length katana built for collection, display, and traditional martial context.

Think of it as the sword equivalent of a serious, well-built balisong: something you own because you respect the craft, the history, and the feel of real steel — even if your day-to-day reps are done on a trainer and your EDC lives in your pocket.

Where This Sword Fits Your Identity

Every edged weapon collection tells a story. Maybe your shelf starts with a couple of trainers, grows into a live blade balisong for sale that you actually carry, and then branches into pieces that represent the cultures behind the craft. The Hideyoshi Honor Guard Samurai Sword is that step into Japanese tradition — a 41" hand-forged 1045 katana with black-and-gold discipline, floral tsuba detail, and a rayskin-wrapped grip that feels anchored in history.

Whether you’re the collector lining up steel from different disciplines, the martial artist who wants a dedicated katana for the rack, or the enthusiast who just appreciates honest construction and clean design, this samurai sword earns its space. Different tool, same core values: real materials, thoughtful build, and steel that tells a story every time you draw it from the saya.

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