The Ōnin school represents a distinctive category of late period characterized by their unsigned status and their integration of thin iron plate construction with brass inlay decoration. While the name suggests a connection to the Ōnin era (1467–1469), contemporary scholarship places these works more broadly within the later period. The precise origins and geographic locus of production remain subjects of ongoing debate, though the surviving corpus demonstrates a cohesive aesthetic vocabulary and technical approach that justifies their recognition as a unified school of manufacture.
The collective style of Ōnin guards centers on two principal decorative modes, both employing shinchū (brass inlay) on thin iron plate bases. The first method scatters naturalistic motifs—tachibana branches, wild geese, chrysanthemums, grasses, flowers, and scrolling arabesques—irregularly across the surface. The second technique applies dotted brass inlay, termed hoshi ("star inlay") or tsuyu ("dewdrop inlay"), positioned between a brass circle centered on the and the rim zone, often accompanied by small openwork designs such as butterflies, clouds, sedge hats, or triple-peaked mountain forms. Many examples synthesize elements from both modes, combining scattered floral motifs with characteristic features such as brass line inlay encircling the perimeter and enlarged surrounded by engraved inlay. The iron itself frequently exhibits a hammered ground and develops a deeply matured rust patina.
Ōnin occupy a significant position within the broader continuum of period iron guard production, representing a bridge between the austere simplicity of early smith-made guards and the more elaborate decorative programs of later periods. The forceful quality of their brass inlay work, combined with rustic iron surfaces and straightforward compositional arrangements, creates an aesthetic of unaffected dignity that has secured their enduring appreciation among collectors and scholars of Japanese sword fittings.