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Eclipse Crest Stealth Shirasaya Wakizashi - Black Wood

Price:

17.95


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Shadowline Kusanagi Tribute Katana Sword - Midnight Black
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Silent Guardian Minimalist Shirasaya Wakizashi - White Wood
Silent Guardian Minimalist Shirasaya Wakizashi - White Wood
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Shadow Crest Silent Shirasaya Wakizashi Sword - Black Wood

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You feel it the moment the blade clears the saya — quiet control, no wasted lines. The Shadow Crest Silent Shirasaya Wakizashi Sword delivers an 11.25" two‑tone stainless blade housed in a minimalist black wood mount marked by a single red crest. At 17.5" overall, it balances display presence with dojo practicality, giving collectors, practitioners, and modern samurai fans a stealth Japanese short sword that speaks in restraint rather than ornament.

17.95 17.95 USD 17.95

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In Hand: When a Shirasaya Wakizashi Moves Without Sound

There’s a particular kind of silence when a shirasaya wakizashi leaves its mount. No guard to catch on cloth, no ornate fittings to snag the draw — just a straight, clean line of steel sliding past wood. The Shadow Crest Silent Shirasaya Wakizashi Sword - Black Wood is built for exactly that moment: an 11.25-inch two-tone stainless blade emerging from a minimalist black wood housing, punctuated only by a single red crest that tells you this isn’t a prop. It’s a modern take on the quiet samurai aesthetic.

Shirasaya Wakizashi for Sale: Minimalist Mount, Maximum Presence

When you’re looking for a wakizashi for sale, you’re usually forced to pick between over-decorated wall pieces and lifeless budget blades. This shirasaya sits in the middle ground where serious collectors and martial artists actually live. The 17.5-inch overall length gives you the proportions of a traditional Japanese short sword, but the stripped-down black wood mount keeps the focus on line, balance, and draw — not on fake gold fittings.

The two-tone blade — bright edge with a blackened spine — emphasizes that same contrast: refined, but not loud. It looks right on a stand, on a dojo rack, or in the hand during slow kata. The single red crest in the wood is the only ornament, a quiet emblem that catches the eye without shouting.

Built for Clean Cuts and Clean Lines

Collectors and practitioners both check the same fundamentals: steel, geometry, and how the blade sits in the mount. Here, the edge is a straight, single-bevel grind in stainless steel — easy to maintain, resistant to corrosion, and honest about its purpose: practice, display, and light cutting, not fantasy cosplay. The spine’s black coating visually grounds the blade, giving the polished edge more pop without feeling gimmicky.

Single-Bevel Edge on Two-Tone Stainless Steel

The single-bevel edge gives the blade a distinct Japanese character, paired with a straight profile that makes draw cuts and controlled motions feel intuitive. Stainless steel keeps upkeep minimal, especially for collectors who display rather than oil and rewrap weekly. The two-tone finish — bright edge, black spine — reads modern while still sitting comfortably in a traditional shirasaya silhouette.

Rectangular Black Wood Shirasaya Mount

The mount is classic shirasaya: rectangular black wood with no tsuba, no menuki, no cord wrap — just clean planes of matte-to-satin black. That simplicity is what makes the sword feel stealth. In hand, the 6.25-inch grip offers enough purchase for a solid one-handed hold, with room for a second hand to support when needed. The wood has a subtle texture that keeps it from feeling slick, but the design remains visually minimal from every angle.

Why This Wakizashi Belongs in a Modern Collection

This isn’t trying to be a full daisho centerpiece with elaborate fittings. Instead, it fills a gap every Japanese sword collector eventually hits: a clean, modern shirasaya wakizashi that doesn’t fight the rest of the display. The Shadow Crest Silent Shirasaya Wakizashi Sword - Black Wood slots beside more traditional katana mounts as the quiet, contemporary outlier — the piece that says you care about silhouette and restraint as much as tsuba art.

For martial artists, the proportions support kata, drawing drills, and stance work without the visual noise of a wrapped tsuka. For enthusiasts of Japanese blades, it’s a short sword that looks like it belongs in a serious collection, even at an accessible price point.

Control, Balance, and Dojo Practicality

On the practice floor, the key question is always the same: does it move the way it looks? At 17.5 inches overall with an 11.25-inch blade, this wakizashi sits in a comfortable intermediate range for transitions, guard changes, and draw practice. The simple shirasaya mount keeps the weight centered and predictable — no heavy fittings pulling the balance off or making the tip feel sluggish.

The smooth rectangular grip encourages precise hand placement. You feel edge orientation through the line of the blade and the feel of the wood, not through bulky wrap or furniture. For dojo-oriented collectors, it’s a sword that can go from stand to practice without feeling like you’re compromising either purpose.

What Balisong Buyers Want to Know

Are butterfly knives legal to buy?

Legality on blades — whether a butterfly knife for sale or a Japanese wakizashi — is always state-specific. In the U.S., most states allow ownership of swords like this shirasaya wakizashi in the home, but carry laws and transport rules vary. States such as California, New York, Massachusetts, and New Jersey tend to be stricter about how and where you can carry bladed weapons in public, while states like Texas, Arizona, and Florida are generally more permissive about blade length and open carry.

Because laws change, always check your current state and local statutes before carrying or displaying blades outside your home. Treat this wakizashi as a collection, decor, or training piece first — not something to walk around with in public unless you’re certain it’s legal in your area and context (such as martial arts events or private property).

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

In the balisong world, a trainer has a dull edge and often drilled or slotted blade to reduce weight and bite; a live blade carries a sharpened edge, tip, and full cutting potential. That distinction matters because flipping skill is built on repetition, and a trainer lets you make mistakes without stitches.

This shirasaya wakizashi isn’t a balisong, but the mindset carries over. Think of it as a live blade short sword with a clean mount — built more for controlled practice, kata, and collection than for casual handling. Respect the edge like you’d respect a live balisong: train deliberately, store it properly, and treat it as a real weapon even if you’re using it primarily as decor.

Is this Japanese wakizashi good for training or just display?

If your focus is cutting competitions and high-end iaito work, you’ll eventually want a purpose-built, fully traditional training sword. But if you want a Japanese-style short sword that comfortably bridges display and light training, this shirasaya wakizashi fits the role well.

The straight, single-bevel blade and simple black wood mount make it excellent for draw practice, stance work, and controlled forms where you don’t want heavy fittings getting in the way. On the shelf, the minimalist design and single crest give it enough character to stand beside more ornate blades without looking out of place.

For the Collector, the Practitioner, and the Modern Samurai Fan

The Shadow Crest Silent Shirasaya Wakizashi Sword - Black Wood isn’t chasing cosplay flash or overbuilt tactical aesthetics. It’s a quiet piece: a two-tone stainless wakizashi in a stealth black shirasaya mount, defined by one red crest and a silhouette that does all the talking.

If you’re a collector, it’s a modern Japanese short sword that earns its slot through clean design. If you’re a practitioner, it’s a practice-capable blade with honest proportions you can actually move with. And if you’re simply drawn to the modern samurai look, it’s the kind of sword that feels as good unsheathed in your hand as it looks resting in its wood mount — present, restrained, and ready to return to silence when the work is done.

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