Skip to Content
Midnight Kanji Display-Ready Samurai Sword - Black Finish

Price:

19.22


Waveform Triple-Display Sword Wall Rack - Black
Waveform Triple-Display Sword Wall Rack - Black
5.00 5.00
Black Pearl Dragon Triad Samurai Sword Set - Midnight Black
Black Pearl Dragon Triad Samurai Sword Set - Midnight Black
51.72 51.72

Midnight Dojo Kanji Display Katana Sword - Black Finish

https://www.butterflyknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/3913/image_1920?unique=f03f5a3

14 sold in last 24 hours

The Midnight Dojo Kanji Display Katana Sword - Black Finish turns any shelf into a mini samurai gallery. A 40-inch silver katana blade pairs with a black sheath brushed in gold kanji and a matching black stand, ready to display straight out of the box. The classic black handle with white diamond wrap and simple tsuba keep the look clean, modern, and unmistakably samurai—perfect for collectors, anime fans, and anyone building a themed room or storefront focal point.

19.22 19.22 USD 19.22 25.16

SW926739BA

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Midnight Dojo Presence: A Samurai Sword Built to Be Seen

The first thing you notice is the contrast. A clean silver katana blade sliding free of a deep black sheath, gold kanji catching the light just enough to hint at a story without shouting for attention. The Midnight Dojo Kanji Display Katana Sword - Black Finish is designed for that exact moment—the reveal on a shelf, in a game room, or in a storefront window where the line between decor and collection piece disappears.

This is a modern decorative samurai sword that understands its role: visual impact first, with enough traditional cues to satisfy anyone who respects katana history and samurai aesthetics.

Display-Ready Samurai Sword for Sale: From Box to Showcase in Minutes

When you buy a samurai sword for display, you don’t want to hunt for extra hardware or improvise a stand. This display-ready set ships with a matching black horizontal stand, pre-sized for the 40-inch katana. The sheath, the sword, and the base are visually tuned to each other, so your first setup feels intentional, not thrown together.

The focal point is the black scabbard with bold gold kanji running along the length. On the stand, that kanji is echoed again along the base, creating a tight visual loop: blade, sheath, stand, all in one unified scene. Whether it’s sitting under LED strips in a gaming room or behind glass in a shop, it reads instantly as a samurai centerpiece.

Modern Katana Styling: Clean Lines, Classic Samurai Cues

This decorative katana leans into a minimalist, modern take on samurai styling. The tsuba (guard) is straight and simple, not overly ornate, which pushes the attention back to the silver blade and kanji-covered sheath. The handle carries the traditional tsuka-ito look: black wrap with white diamond shapes peeking through, instantly recognizable to anyone who spends time around katana imagery, anime, or samurai cinema.

At full 40-inch overall length, the proportions look right on a wall, shelf, or glass case—long enough to command attention, balanced enough that it doesn’t overpower the space. The black finish across handle, sheath, and stand acts like a frame around the silver blade, giving the entire set a stealthy, midnight-dojo vibe.

Collector-Focused Samurai Sword for Sale: Built for Visual Cohesion

Collectors notice when a display piece feels like a set instead of random parts. Here, the design is coordinated from top to bottom. The sheath is a true matte or satin black that doesn’t fight reflections from the polished silver blade. Gold kanji is scaled to stay legible at a distance, but clean up close. Even the stand carries gold kanji to lock in the theme.

For entry-level collectors and decor buyers, that cohesion matters. It means you’re not just buying a random decorative sword—you’re buying a scene. For shop owners, that means instant merchandising: one product, one footprint, full visual story.

Build Details That Matter for a Display Katana

While this is a decorative samurai sword, the details are still what make it feel legitimate on a shelf. The katana-style curved blade has a clear spine-to-edge profile that tracks with traditional katana silhouettes, and the handle length visually balances the blade so it doesn’t look toy-like or disproportionate.

Blade, Guard, and Handle Proportions

The curved silver blade runs long enough to feel like a full katana, not a short replica. The guard is sized to be functional in appearance without stealing the visual focus. The handle’s black-and-white diamond wrap pattern is tight and evenly spaced, which keeps the geometry clean and crisp under lighting.

Stand and Sheath Integration

The included horizontal stand is cut to fit the sheath so it nests securely without wobbling. When the blade is sheathed and resting on the stand, the profile is low and stable, making it well-suited for tabletop, counter, or shelf display. The black finish on both sheath and stand means the silver and gold elements stand out clearly, even in lower light.

For Decorators, Anime Fans, and Samurai Enthusiasts

This sword hits a sweet spot between themed decor and entry-level collecting. If you’re building an anime wall, a gaming setup with a samurai corner, or a movie-inspired display, this piece gives you the look of a full katana without needing to invest in a high-end, battle-ready blade. The gold kanji provides the unmistakable Japanese-inspired touch that reads instantly in photos and in person.

For gift buyers, it’s straightforward: you get the sword, the sheath, and the stand in one box, with a clear visual theme that works in bedrooms, offices, living rooms, and shop interiors. It’s equally comfortable in a home theater as it is in a collectibles display next to figures, art prints, and props.

What Balisong Buyers Want to Know

Are butterfly knives legal to buy?

Butterfly knife (balisong) laws vary widely by state, and anyone who collects blades—whether katanas, folders, or balisongs—needs to understand their local rules. In the United States, some states treat balisongs like standard folding knives, while others classify them closer to switchblades. As of the latest widely referenced legal landscape:

  • Generally more permissive states (often allowing possession and, in many cases, carry with some restrictions) include: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
  • States with notable restrictions or bans on balisong possession, sale, or carry (often treating them like prohibited or heavily regulated knives) include: California, Hawaii, Maryland (certain counties), Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Washington.
  • States with mixed or complex rules, where factors like blade length, intent, or concealed vs. open carry matter, include: Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island.

Knife laws change frequently, and local city or county ordinances can be stricter than state law. This decorative samurai sword is aimed at display and collecting, but if you’re also searching for a butterfly knife for sale or a balisong for sale, always check up-to-date state and local regulations or consult a qualified legal source before buying or carrying.

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

In the balisong world, the difference between a trainer and a live blade comes down to edge geometry and intent. A balisong trainer has a dull, unsharpened blade profile—often with holes or cutouts—that lets you practice opening, closing, and flipping without the risk of cutting yourself. It’s built for skill progression and muscle memory.

A live blade butterfly knife has a sharpened edge designed for cutting and, in some cases, defensive or utility use. Live blades demand respect: basic openings, grip changes, and aerials can cut you quickly if your fundamentals aren’t solid. Many flippers start with a balisong trainer for sale, log their hours, then step into a live blade once they’ve got clean control.

This Midnight Dojo katana is a display samurai sword, not a balisong, but collectors who love knives often cross over between katanas, folders, and butterfly knives, so understanding trainer vs. live blade helps you build a collection that matches your skill and comfort level.

Is this butterfly knife good for learning to flip?

This particular product is a decorative samurai sword, not a butterfly knife, so it’s not for flipping. If you’re specifically searching for a butterfly knife for sale to learn flipping, look for:

  • A dedicated balisong trainer with a dull edge.
  • Handles with a predictable balance—often stainless or aluminum in beginner-friendly builds.
  • Reliable pivot hardware that swings smoothly without excessive play.
  • Clear bite-handle vs. safe-handle orientation, usually marked or easy to identify.

Use a trainer to build your foundations, then add live blades—and display pieces like this Midnight Dojo katana—to round out your collection with both skill tools and visual centerpieces.

Blade Person, Decor Builder, or Collector—This Sword Fits the Shelf

Whether you come from the balisong community, from anime and samurai films, or from interior design, this display-ready samurai sword gives you something specific: a clean, cohesive katana set that looks right the moment you unbox it. The silver blade, black finish, gold kanji, and matching stand create a self-contained story that drops straight onto a shelf and feels finished.

If your world includes butterfly knife flipping, katana lore, or just a love of steel and silhouette, the Midnight Dojo Kanji Display Katana Sword - Black Finish slots in as the visual anchor point—the piece that tells everyone who walks into the room that you care about both style and the culture behind the blade.

No Specifications