Does the green ito wrap color have any traditional significance in Japanese sword culture?

 Updated Mar 2026

In classical Japanese sword mounting (koshirae), the color of the ito wrap — the handle binding — carried both aesthetic and symbolic meaning, though conventions were not as strictly codified as in heraldry. Green ito was associated with certain martial schools and family traditions, and specific daimyo households used distinctive color combinations on their swords as a form of visual identification. In the Edo period, green wrappings often appeared on presentation swords and formal dress mountings. Today, collectors appreciate green ito primarily for its visual contrast against lacquered saya and metallic tsuba, but the historical precedent gives the color choice a legitimacy that purely modern decorative decisions lack.

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