How is a teal lacquer saya different from a rayskin-wrapped saya?
Updated Mar 2026
A teal lacquer saya is crafted from a wood core — typically honoki or a comparable lightweight wood — that is shaped, smoothed, and then coated with multiple layers of tinted lacquer to achieve a deep, uniform color. The finish is glossy and hard, offering good protection and a sleek, formal aesthetic. A teal pearl rayskin (same-gumi) saya, by contrast, wraps the wood core in genuine rayskin before finishing, introducing a natural pebbly texture across the surface. The individual nodules of rayskin catch light differently at various angles, giving the saya a dynamic, almost iridescent quality. Both treatments are period-authentic decorative methods in Japanese blade presentation, but rayskin adds tactile complexity that lacquer alone cannot replicate. Your choice between them largely comes down to whether you prefer refined uniformity or organic visual texture in your display.