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Geisha Bloom Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - ABS Black

Price:

8.99


Night Blossoms Tanto Spring Assisted Knife - ABS Black
Night Blossoms Tanto Spring Assisted Knife - ABS Black
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Midnight Vein Dual-Deploy Stiletto Knife - Black Marble
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Blossom Poise Quick-Deploy Assisted Knife - Black ABS

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/698/image_1920?unique=edc35a0

5 sold in last 24 hours

West of Austin, parked at a trailhead at dusk, this spring assisted knife sits clipped in your pocket—calm geisha and blossoms on the handle, black tanto blade folded tight. One press on the flipper and the assist snaps it open, liner lock set, ready for cord, tape, or camp chores. Light in the hand, easy in the pocket, it rides quiet until you need it. This is for Texans who like a little art in with their everyday edge.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

A102MKY

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
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When a Spring Assisted Knife Rides Shotgun on a Texas Back Road

Out past San Marcos, where the blacktop turns to caliche and the cedar breaks up the horizon, this spring assisted knife sits clipped inside your pocket or tossed in the console. The handle shows a calm geisha and cherry blossoms. The black American tanto blade waits behind the flipper. It’s not a showpiece—it just happens to look like one when you finally need a clean cut in the heat, dust, or dim light of a ranch gate.

At 8.75 inches open and 5 inches closed, it fits a Texas hand with room to work. The 3.75-inch plain-edge blade gives you enough reach for feed bags, hose, paracord, or quick box duty in a warehouse off Loop 410. The spring assist does the rest: one press, one snap, job in front of you.

Spring Assisted Knife Confidence in Everyday Texas Carry

This isn’t a glass-case collectible that’s afraid of sweat or dust. The ABS handle with 3D-printed geisha art has a slight texture that settles into your grip, even if your fingers are slick from motor oil or river water. Underneath, steel liners give it backbone. The liner lock engages with a crisp click you can feel more than hear, even over a shop fan in a Houston bay.

That spring assisted flipper earns its keep when your off hand is full—feed bucket, tackle box, coil of rope. The motion is short and decisive. No wrist flicks, no drama. Just a tuned assist that takes the blade from closed to working in one clean arc. At 4.21 ounces, it rides steady in a pocket on a long I-35 haul and doesn’t drag down light shorts on a humid Galveston morning.

Geisha Detail, Tanto Workload: How This Blade Fits Texas Use

The artwork draws the eye first. A robed figure, blossoms, branches, and soft tones spread across glossy ABS scales. But the business end is all work: a black coated, matte-finished American tanto blade that holds up to Texas tasks without flashing reflections in August sun.

The stout tanto tip is built for controlled piercing—cutting shrink wrap in a Lubbock warehouse, popping stubborn plastic plugs, starting rope cuts without wandering. The long secondary edge gives you a flat run for push cuts through tape, straps, and cardboard after a freight delivery. The matte black coating shrugs off minor scuffs and caliche dust while framing the Japanese characters near the ricasso. It reads as tactical without trying too hard—just a plain, useful shape that happens to carry some character.

A Spring Assisted Knife That Stands Out in a Texas Pocket Dump

Drop your keys, wallet, and change on a bar in Lockhart and this knife is the piece that makes someone ask, “Where’d you get that?” The geisha and blossoms stand out against the usual tan G10 and stainless. But once it’s in hand, it feels like any good working Texas spring assisted knife—no learning curve, no delicate parts, just a flipper, liner lock, and pocket clip that do their job.

Art on the Handle, Work at the Edge

The ABS scales stay easy to wipe down after sweat, barbecue grease, or river mud. Behind the art, the steel and spring assisted mechanism keep doing what they were built to do: open fast, lock solid, fold clean. It looks like a story, but it cuts like a tool.

Texas Carry Reality: How This Spring Assisted Knife Rides

On a belt in West Texas, in a back pocket in Dallas, or clipped inside a work pant pocket in a San Antonio distribution center, this spring assisted knife rides low and out of the way. The pocket clip keeps the geisha art mostly tucked, so what shows is blade spine and clip—not a loud statement piece, just a tool waiting its turn.

Five inches closed means it doesn’t fight for room with your phone. The weight sits in that steady middle ground: enough heft to find without looking when you’re under a trailer or crouched in a blind; light enough to carry every day through triple-digit heat without thinking about it. That’s what matters in Texas carry culture—gear that feels natural, not like an obligation.

Texas Knife Law, Spring Assisted Comfort

In Texas, spring assisted knives fall into the same broad comfort zone that made switchblades and automatics legal again. State law now allows blades with assisted mechanisms, and there’s no blade length cap at the state level for adults carrying a standard pocket knife. This spring assisted knife fits squarely into that everyday, no-fuss category.

Where you still have to think is location: schools, courthouses, and certain government buildings carry their own restrictions, and some employers set stricter rules on what rides in a pocket. But for most Texans—running errands between New Braunfels and San Antonio, checking fence lines outside Abilene, or stocking shelves in a Fort Worth shop—this assisted blade is a legal, practical choice that doesn’t raise eyebrows when you use it to break down boxes or cut tie-downs.

Are Spring Assisted Knives Treated Like Automatics Here?

Legally, Texas doesn’t punish the spring assisted mechanism. The law focuses more on where you carry and how you use a knife than on whether a spring helps it open. For most adults, a folding spring assisted knife like this one rides comfortably within state law for day-to-day carry. Always pair that with common sense and check any local or workplace rules, but statewide, this assisted design is on solid ground.

Why a Spring Assisted Knife Still Matters in Texas Heat

In July, sweat, dust, and gloves make thumb studs clumsy. A flipper plus spring assist cuts through that. Even with light work gloves in a Panhandle wind or sweaty fingers around a Hill Country fire pit, the short press on the tab kicks this blade into place without a fight.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed the old restrictions on switchblades and OTF knives, putting them in the same broad legal category as other pocket knives for adults. The main limits today deal with specific locations—schools, some government buildings, and secured areas—not the OTF or spring assisted mechanism itself. For many Texans, a spring assisted knife like this feels familiar and fast without needing the full automatic or OTF setup.

Is this spring assisted knife tough enough for Texas ranch and shop work?

The steel tanto blade, 3.75 inches of plain edge, and steel liners behind the ABS handle are built for real tasks: cutting baling twine, scoring rubber hose, trimming strap, breaking tape on feed sacks, or working through shipping boxes. The black coating hides the surface wear that comes with grit, caliche dust, and concrete floors. It’s not a safe queen—it’s meant to live in a truck, on a belt, or in a toolbox.

How does this compare to a Texas OTF knife for daily carry?

An OTF knife offers that straight-out-the-front action, but a spring assisted folder like this gives nearly the same real-world speed with a simpler mechanism and familiar maintenance. For Texans who want quick deployment without the added cost or attention an OTF sometimes brings, this spring assisted knife hits the middle ground: fast, legal for most everyday settings, and easy to trust.

First Cut: Putting This Knife to Work in a Texas Moment

Picture a late evening outside Kerrville. Tailgate down, cooler open, the air just starting to lose the day’s heat. Someone hands you a bundle of stubborn nylon strap to trim. You feel the geisha handle under your fingers, thumb finds the flipper, and the spring rolls the blade out with a clean, unhurried snap. Black tanto edge bites, fibers part, problem solved. You wipe the blade on your jeans, fold it, and clip it back. No fanfare. Just a spring assisted knife that fits the way Texans actually live—art on the outside, work in the steel.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.21
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Material ABS
Theme Geisha
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock