Is a tachi a good display centerpiece alongside katana and wakizashi?
Updated Mar 2026
A tachi pairs exceptionally well with katana and wakizashi in a multi-piece Japanese sword display, but it works best as a compositional anchor rather than a direct set companion. Historically, samurai carried a katana-wakizashi daisho as a matched pair - tachi were not part of that pairing. Displaying a tachi alongside katana and wakizashi therefore works as a chronological or stylistic narrative: the tachi representing the earlier Heian-Kamakura mounted warrior tradition, the daisho representing the later Edo-period samurai culture. Collector displays organized around this historical arc tend to be visually compelling and educational. For mounting, a dedicated tachi-kake (stand designed for edge-down orientation) ensures the piece is presented correctly and maintains the blade's relationship to its historical context.