The Oda lineage emerged as one of the two principal schools of Satsuma metalwork alongside the Chishiki line, establishing itself during the middle to late period as the preeminent tradition representing the martial aesthetic of the southern domain. The school's founder, Oda Naoka, developed a distinctive approach that mirrored the values of Satsuma warriors who esteemed plain strength, steadfastness, and martial vigor. Working primarily in well-forged iron with substantial (body and thickness), Naoka specialized in motifs that reflected local character and military tradition: the natamame (sword bean, whose curved pod resembled a blade and symbolized safe return from battle), fierce tigers splitting bamboo (evoking both Satsuma's famous bamboo groves and the domain's military achievements in the Korean campaigns), and dragons slipping through sand. His treatment of these subjects was bold and imposing, executed through nikubori —a technique combining relief carving with openwork ground—that created powerful three-dimensional forms. His signature likewise conveyed this raw strength and vigor.
The school's collective technical character centered on the marriage of structural robustness with dynamic naturalism. Oda craftsmen worked thick iron plates into forms that appeared sturdy yet possessed subtle modeling in the rim treatment, often paring the edge to create distinctive rounded profiles. Their carving achieved a remarkable fusion of strength and suppleness: beans appear ready to spring from their pods, vines wind with sinuous realism, and animals—whether tigers in ferocious motion or the varied postures of monkey troops—display palpable vitality. The second generation, Naonori, refined his father's powerful manner into increased precision and elaboration, adopting more pictorial subject matter in keeping with contemporary taste: the Twelve Zodiac animals, shishi (lions) with peonies, and narrative scenes from Chinese lore such as Huang Shigong testing Zhang Liang. While his signature lacked the forceful character of the founder's, it was superbly orderly and well-regulated. Naonori also incorporated influences from outside Satsuma tradition—particularly echoes of Gotō house style in figural work and occasional use of ground, a rarity in the province—reflecting study under Tanaka Moriyuki of the Gotō Mitsusato lineage. Later generations including Naonori (直升), Naoshō (直昇), and Naokane (直堅) continued to produce works of high artistic distinction, with Naokane creating exceptional pieces on plates with meticulous finish and carefully extended chisel work.
The Oda school's legacy resides in its embodiment of Satsuma martial culture through metalwork that balanced regional identity with technical evolution. Motifs such as the "thousand monkeys" (senbiki-zaru)—an ambitious integration of rim, , and into unified design—demonstrated the school's command of complex openwork and relief carving, achieving documentary value through dated examples that predate similar work by the Yagami group. The tradition's characteristic subjects became so closely associated with Satsuma taste that they served as visual emblems of the domain's ethos: plain earnestness, stalwart spirit, and the marriage of strength with subtle naturalism. Through successive generations, Oda makers maintained both the technical foundation of thick, well-forged iron construction and the aesthetic principle that decoration should enhance rather than obscure structural integrity, leaving behind a body of work that remains representative of late provincial metalwork at its most culturally distinctive and technically accomplished.