What makes 1095 carbon steel a good choice for collectible ninjato?

 Updated Mar 2026

1095 carbon steel contains roughly 0.95% carbon, placing it at the high end of the plain carbon steel spectrum. This composition gives craftsmen the ability to achieve differential hardening - a process where the edge is quenched to a harder state than the spine - producing the visible hada (grain pattern) and hamon (temper line) that collectors specifically look for. For a display ninjato, this means the blade carries authentic metallurgical character rather than a purely decorative profile. The trade-off is that 1095 has no chromium, so it requires routine oiling to prevent surface oxidation, which most serious collectors consider an acceptable part of the ownership experience.

Popular Products

30% OFF1095 steel katana
149.00 USD
209.00 USD
0% OFF1095 carbon steel katana
0.00 USD
239.00 USD
15% OFFjapanese katana
199.00 USD
239.00 USD
20% OFFblack katana
169.00 USD
209.00 USD
15% OFFjapanese katana
169.00 USD
199.00 USD
15% OFFninja sword
159.00 USD
189.00 USD
20% OFFsekiro's katana
229.00 USD
289.00 USD
15% OFFblack katana
189.00 USD
219.00 USD
15% OFFwhite katana
169.00 USD
199.00 USD
30% OFF1095 steel katana
159.00 USD
229.00 USD
20% OFFsamurai sword
179.00 USD
219.00 USD
15% OFFred katana
199.00 USD
239.00 USD
30% OFF1095 steel katana
149.00 USD
209.00 USD
0% OFF1095 carbon steel katana
0.00 USD
239.00 USD
15% OFFjapanese katana
199.00 USD
239.00 USD
20% OFFblack katana
169.00 USD
209.00 USD
15% OFFjapanese katana
169.00 USD
199.00 USD
15% OFFninja sword
159.00 USD
189.00 USD
20% OFFsekiro's katana
229.00 USD
289.00 USD
15% OFFblack katana
189.00 USD
219.00 USD
15% OFFwhite katana
169.00 USD
199.00 USD
30% OFF1095 steel katana
159.00 USD
229.00 USD
20% OFFsamurai sword
179.00 USD
219.00 USD
15% OFFred katana
199.00 USD
239.00 USD

Explore Our Collections