A kaiken with gold dragon.
Usually the word "Kaiken" brings us the image of women's one.
For women in samurai family, kaiken is necessary as same as Dai-sho sword
for men. Women take it within a bag and put into the sash. The tassel
and the cloth of the bag is shown at the breast as fashion of ladies.
Examples of Kaiken in casual form, from the TV program "Atsuhime"
by NHK.
Even now, brides put kaiken into their sash at the wedding. But, the kaiken
is just a wood stick, the bag and the tassel shows the remembrance of samurai
age.
A bride for example. The tassel and the bag are pure white, and so is the
wedding dress under the red over dress.
In such ladies kaiken, blade length is not so long as men's. Some people
say around 6 sun (18cm) is common. Probably the length is good as a part
of dressing. When we make kaiken blades for brides, the length are settled
around 20cm.
Kaiken is not made for display, it is in the cloth or in the bag. But we
find such kaikens those have decorations on them. They can not be seen
by other people. It is for private pleasure. Sometimes the motif means
policy of the owner, or wishes of parents who ordered it for their daughter.
Kaiken can be a spiritual amulet, as well as an actual dagger.
This has a Hebraic letter on its head. That is not found in old swords,
but the spirit is the same.
Some people claims about the blade of kaiken, that the hamon should be
suguha and yakizume (straight pattern and no turn back). A straight hamon
pattern suggests a quiet wife, and no turn back suggests the bride never
return to the parents (no divorce). I think that is a kind of superstitions
made recently. I have not found such blades in kaiken koshirae from Edo
period.
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