Navy Posted August 3 Report Posted August 3 44 minutes ago, EdWolf said: @WillFalstaff You can use leather wax. I use a thin coat of petroleum jelly. Cheap and gives a good result. Used it for more than 40 years to preserve leather liners of German helmets. Another good product is the Nivea cream. Works well on aged leather, with no blackening effect. 2 Quote
Lareon Posted August 3 Report Posted August 3 I use Renapur leather basalm, brings back the suppleness of the leather and helps to protect the leather 2 Quote
Rawa Posted August 11 Report Posted August 11 On 7/31/2025 at 4:46 PM, Rawa said: So I bought cheap parts will post here when it arrives. Tsuka is short. Maybe it have ishizuki. Adding more pics with measuring tape. Wooden saya with black lacquer. Fuchi numbered 198 have chuso ana plugged. Sarute looks good and tassel is shorter then usual. Tsuba crudely finished boar eyes not fully carved. Rubber sits tight dunno if there is any kojiri. Edited - I measured and looks like it there is no cap at the end. [40.5cm length to rubber end.] I won't dissasemble saya. Overall fine package. 2 Quote
Lareon Posted August 11 Report Posted August 11 I've not seen the Release button filled before. Interesting Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted August 11 Report Posted August 11 Wouldn't surprise me if this was a wartime piece-together. Quote
Rawa Posted August 12 Report Posted August 12 Yeah looks like a last-ditch effort. Looks kinda like this on picture. Same black lacquer on saya. Quote
3Jean Posted August 22 Report Posted August 22 This was my first gunto. Stainless Type 97 with brown tassel. The leather is pretty dried out, but I've been using Renapur on it and it seems to be working. 6 1 Quote
Rawa Posted September 4 Report Posted September 4 Interesting wakizashi https://www.shigure-militaria.com/blank/edo-era-mumei-imperial-Japanese-army-field-officer-s-gunto 2 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted September 9 Report Posted September 9 Debated as to whether to post this here or on the Fittings thread, but here it is. Posted by @Mrbacon HERE. I think I've seen this once before, but pretty rare - a leather haikan. 2 Quote
saemonjonosuke Posted September 9 Report Posted September 9 Interesting Police sword with beautiful leather cover. 3 1 1 Quote
robinalexander Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 On 8/23/2025 at 2:10 AM, 3Jean said: The leather is pretty dried out, but I've been using Renapur on it and it seems to be working. Agreed John, IMO Ranapur is the absolute best. Quote
Alex A Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 Reading through this, surprised nothing has been mentioned about artificial leather? I know in WW2, artificial leather was used for holsters due to shortages, referred to as ersatz leather. Used to have a ww2 pistol in such an holster. Was this never used for Japanese swords? Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 1 hour ago, Alex A said: ersatz leather Wow, Alex, I had completely forgotten about this issue and the fact that I have an ersatz saya cover of compressed paper! In the discussion, below, Shamsy posted one that is of some sort of imitation leather, too: A couple of photos from the thread: My compressed paper saya cover Steve's ersatz leather: 2 Quote
Alex A Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 Thanks Bruce, reading through this did get me wondering. Thought it was going to be one of those ask a stupid question moments and turn out that it was very common. How common it was for Japanese swords, maybe interesting to find out. Perhaps there are owners of swords that think they have a genuine leather cover when in fact, not. 1 Quote
Bruce Pennington Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 Your question reminds me of the many fake and/or island swords that have cracking, thin saya covers. They are probably that imitation, ersatz-type material. Wonder how many of them, that we wrote off as fakes, were of what you are bringing up. Quote
Alex A Posted September 10 Report Posted September 10 I was just about to state that maybe it wasn't used so much on Japanese swords due to being impractical, as in maybe falling apart due to temperatures and humidity in places around East/South East Asia. Though then thought about holsters and stuff in Europe with it throwing bucket loads down. I'm clueless but perhaps there is some info somewhere. Though, would bet it has caused confusion over the years and some genuine items been disregarded 1 Quote
PNSSHOGUN Posted September 12 Report Posted September 12 A sword in the collection came with ersatz leather over a plain wood Saya, unfortunately it disintegrated during shipping with only the end cap remaining in one piece. 1 1 Quote
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