How does a shirasaya tanto differ from a standard tanto with full fittings?
Updated Feb 2026
A shirasaya tanto and a fully fitted tanto are the same blade in two completely different mountings. The blade - the forged steel, the tang, the habaki - is essentially identical between the two formats. What differs is everything around the blade. A fully fitted tanto has a tsuba guard, a handle wrapped in ito cord over same ray skin, menuki decorative pieces under the wrap, a kashira cap at the end of the handle, and a lacquered scabbard with a matching color scheme. A shirasaya tanto has none of these components - just a precisely fitted wooden handle and scabbard carved from a single piece of wood. The practical handling difference is minimal since tanto are short swords not designed for combat use in modern contexts. The display difference is significant: the fitted tanto is a presentation of the full Japanese martial tradition, while the shirasaya tanto is a presentation of the blade alone. Many collectors own both formats for the same blade type, appreciating the different character each mounting style creates.