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Ruby Marble Trinity Samurai Sword Set - Red Black

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96.99


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Ruby Marble Samurai Display Sword Set - Red Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8951/image_1920?unique=70093d1

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East of Austin or out in El Paso, this ruby marble samurai sword set looks right at home on a wall behind a well-used saddle stand. Three matching blades—katana, wakizashi, and tanto—carry bright red wraps, black marble-patterned scabbards, and gold accents. Built as a bold display set, it ships with a stand, ready for the den, office, or shop where steel and story share the same space.

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SW926671RD

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Ruby Steel in a Texas Room

In a Hill Country ranch house, a Houston loft, or a Panhandle gun room, there’s always one wall that says the most about the person who owns it. For some it’s antlers. For some it’s framed oilfield maps. For others, it’s steel. This Ruby Marble Samurai Display Sword Set belongs on that wall, catching light in three bright red lines you can see from the doorway.

The set gives you the classic trio: a full-length katana, a mid-length wakizashi, and a compact tanto, each with matching red handle wraps and black marble-patterned scabbards. Gold-colored guards and end caps tie the whole thing together, so whether your place looks out over mesquite and caliche or concrete and freeway, this sword set reads clean, intentional, and a little dangerous in the right way.

Samurai-Style Sword Set for a Texas Collector

Plenty of Texans collect guns. Some collect custom knives. A few collect blades that tell a different story—old-world steel in a state that understands it. This three-piece Japanese-style sword set is built for that kind of display. The katana’s long, curved silver blade reaches across the stand with a single, clean edge. The wakizashi and tanto rest below in matching red-and-black saya, stacked like steps.

The red tsuka-ito wrap shows black diamond inlays underneath, giving that traditional samurai look without feeling fragile or fussy. The gold-tone tsuba guards sit between hand and blade, adding enough detail to draw the eye without turning it into costume. You’re not buying a movie prop here. You’re buying a coordinated sword trio that looks at home over a leather sofa, behind a bar, or mounted above a row of lever actions.

How This Samurai Sword Set Fits Texas Spaces

Texas homes and shops run big. High ceilings. Long walls. Open rooms that swallow up small décor. A single short blade can disappear. Three matched swords with ruby red handles do not.

Mounted on the included stand on a bookshelf in a Dallas high-rise, the set cuts through glass and skyline with color alone. Set on a credenza in a San Antonio office, it tells clients you respect tradition but don’t decorate with clichés. In a West Texas bunkhouse or game room, it shares space with spurs, old Winchester posters, and the kind of things you don’t find in a catalog.

The horizontal stand lets you move it where it fits your life best: top of a gun safe, back bar in a home saloon, or the corner of a studio where you already keep your training gear. When the blades are sheathed, all you see is ruby wrap, marble scabbard, and deep, steady lines.

Texas Knife Law and Owning a Three-Sword Set

Texans ask the same question anytime they add new steel to the house: what does the law say? As of current Texas law, swords and long blades fall under the "location-restricted knife" rules. Ownership at home is legal. Displaying them on your own property is legal. Where you carry them is what matters.

Texas Locations Where Long Blades Are Restricted

The state treats long blades differently once you leave your property. Schools, courthouses, secure government buildings, and a few other listed locations stay off-limits for "location-restricted" knives and swords. This three-piece samurai set is built as house or shop display steel, not walk-around-town gear, and it fits that role cleanly.

On your wall in Beaumont or your office in Lubbock, you’re well within Texas law. Behind the counter of your own business, same story. You respect the state’s carry rules, and in return, you get freedom at home to collect what you want—whether that’s tactical folders, big fixed blades, or a ruby-red samurai trio made to start conversations.

Details That Matter When You Buy a Samurai Sword Set in Texas

You’re not just buying three random blades. You’re buying a matched set that needs to look right from across the room. Here, each piece shares the same ruby handle wrap, the same marble red-and-black saya pattern, and the same gold-tone hardware. The visual line from katana to wakizashi to tanto is clean and intentional. No odd colors, no mismatched fittings.

The blades themselves are curved, single-edged, and bright silver, built on traditional katana-style profiles. They’re sharp enough for light cutting practice if you know what you’re doing and where you’re doing it, but the set is clearly tuned for display first. Think more "samurai steel on the wall of a Fort Worth townhome" than "brush-clearing in the Big Thicket."

Texas Use Cases for a Display Samurai Sword Set

In a Houston media room, this set rides under a mounted TV, flanked by import film posters and shelves of anime and manga. In an Austin music studio, it sits behind the mixing desk, reflecting LEDs and stage light. In a Midland office, it shares shelf space with model pump jacks and leather-bound ledgers, a reminder that serious work and serious gear often go together.

For dojo owners, martial arts instructors, or anyone training in Japanese sword arts in Texas, the ruby marble set can anchor the front of the room. Students see where the tradition comes from every time they bow in. Visitors understand this isn’t a casual hobby. It’s a practice that has earned wall space.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Samurai Sword Sets

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal to own and carry, as long as you respect the general location restrictions that apply to many weapons—schools and certain secured government buildings remain off-limits. This sword set isn’t an OTF knife, but many Texas buyers collecting swords also carry modern folders or automatics day to day, and the same rule applies: know where you can’t carry, and you’re fine.

Can I openly display this three-sword set in my Texas home or shop?

You can. Texas law allows you to own and display swords and long blades on your own property and in your own business, so long as you’re not in a restricted location like a school or courthouse. On a living room wall in Corpus, above a bar in Amarillo, or behind the counter of a privately owned tattoo shop in Waco, this ruby marble sword set is legal display steel.

How does this compare to other décor pieces I could hang?

Art prints and metal signs are background noise. A three-piece samurai sword set with ruby handles and marble-patterned scabbards is a statement. If you’re the kind of Texan who already owns good knives and knows why steel matters, this set extends that story from your pocket to your wall. It doesn’t flash, it doesn’t blink, it just sits there in red and gold and says you care about blades as more than tools.

Ruby Blades in a Texas Evening

Picture an August evening outside San Marcos. Windows open, ceiling fan ticking, grill cooling on the back porch. Inside, the house has gone quiet. You walk past the gun safe and the bookcase, and the corner lamp throws a warm line across the ruby marble sword set on its stand. Three matching handles, three dark scabbards veined like stone, one long blade catching just enough light to look alive.

You don’t need to explain it to anyone. In this state, where people still pass down pocketknives and keep old bayonets in the closet, a samurai sword trio doesn’t feel out of place. It feels like one more way to say you respect steel, story, and the kind of room that could only belong to someone from here.

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