dakary Posted May 15, 2023 Report Posted May 15, 2023 Hi everybody, I am wondering how common it was for rayskin to be dyed historically on tachi, katana, etc. (in particular, during the sengoku period) and, if they did it, what colours were common and, perhaps, how they did it (recipes, etc.). I think I have seen a few black ones, but I don't think it was common. I can't recall ever seeing other colours. Thanks! Dan Quote
Bazza Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 I once had a big Shinshinto katana with a red-lacquered same tsuka. I still have a Shinshinto katana with a gold-lacquered same tsuka. BaZZa. 2 Quote
Curran Posted May 16, 2023 Report Posted May 16, 2023 You confused me at rayskin dying vs rayskin dyeing. The marine biologist side of me got curious at the title. On the tosogu side: mostly red lacquer, gold lacquer, and just standard urushi brown-black. I believe I have seen blue once or twice, and possibly green too- thought the green may have been more modern. With a shinsakuto, I believe there even was a warm purple color same tsuka- but it was part of an anime inspired koshirae. 1 Quote
dakary Posted May 16, 2023 Author Report Posted May 16, 2023 Thanks for the info (and the spelling correction!) Quote
Larason2 Posted May 17, 2023 Report Posted May 17, 2023 As Curran says, the material used to dye samegawa was urushi. Urushi was traditionally dyed red and black, and those are still the most popular colours. Still, if you look at urushi, there were many colours going back quite far in time, they were just less common. The Japanese typically used ground up coloured rocks for pigments in urushi, and there was a fair bit of variety in the colours they could achieve. Quote
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