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Blush Bolt Quick-Strike Mini OTF Knife - Pink

Price:

15.99


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Blush Bolt Quick-Strike Mini OTF Knife - Pink

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/739/image_1920?unique=916d8e9

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Heat’s already building on the blacktop when you slide this mini OTF knife from your pocket. The Blush Bolt fires a matte black dagger blade out the front with a clean, double-action thumb slide, then disappears back into a pink, textured handle that won’t slip, even when your palms are slick. At 5.5 inches overall and just 2.42 ounces, it rides low in jeans or scrubs, trims loose feed bags, opens taped boxes, and stays out of sight until it’s needed. This is the OTF knife Texans actually carry.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB306PKD

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Double/Single Action
  • Pocket Clip

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The sun’s not high yet, but the hood of your truck already burns your palm. Feed bags in the bed, boxes stacked in the cab, one hand on the gate latch. The other finds the little OTF riding low in your pocket. Thumb hits the slide, blade jumps out the front, clean and straight. Cut, retract, move on. No show. No drama. Just a matte black edge and a pink handle that never disappears against a dusty seat.

Mini OTF Knife Texas Carriers Actually Use

Plenty of blades look mean in a photo and clumsy in real life. This mini OTF knife is built for the way Texans actually carry. At 3.5 inches closed and 2.42 ounces, it drops into the watch pocket of a pair of Wranglers, tucks behind a belt buckle in the truck, or clips to scrubs without dragging the fabric down. The low-profile clip keeps it pinned and quiet when you’re hopping in and out all day.

The blade is a 2-inch matte black dagger profile—sharp point, plain edge, no serrations to snag when you’re slicing plastic banding off a pallet in a San Antonio warehouse or opening feed sacks in a Panhandle wind. The plain edge is easy to touch up at the end of the week on a cheap stone in the garage. No fuss, no ceremony.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For When Speed Matters

On a hot pump island off I-35 or a dim bar backroom in Houston, you don’t always have two hands free. One hand holds hose, box, or door. The other hand finds that thumb slide. This is a true double-action OTF knife: same motion throws the blade out and pulls it back in. No wrist flick, no liner lock, no hunting for a thumb stud in the dark.

The side thumb slide tracks the length of the pink handle where your thumb lands naturally. Resistance is dialed in so it won’t fire by accident bouncing in a center console, but it doesn’t fight you either. You feel the spring load, commit to the push, and the blade snaps out the front with a sound you can hear over a shop fan.

Texas OTF Knife Built for Heat, Sweat, and Real Pockets

Central Texas in August will show you fast which knives were built for catalog photos and which were built for sweat. The Blush Bolt’s pink handle isn’t slick paint—it’s textured and matte so it doesn’t skate when your hands are wet from ice bags or diesel. The rectangular frame sits flat against your palm, whether you’re in a pinch grip opening mail in an air-conditioned office or a hammer grip working through shrink-wrap under a metal-roof shed.

The contrast of black blade and pink handle isn’t about looks alone. In a dark truck cab at 5 a.m. outside Lubbock, that pink rectangle stands out against the seat, so you’re not digging for a black-on-black tool. On a crowded Dallas train, it reads more like a personal accessory than a threat, even though it’ll punch through tape, nylon straps, and tough packaging without flinching.

Texas OTF Knife and the Law: What You Need to Know

A lot of buyers still walk into a shop and whisper the same question: “Are OTF knives legal in Texas?” They remember when autos and switchblades lived in a gray area. That time’s passed. Texas law changed. Automatic knives, including OTF designs like this one, are legal for most adults across the state, from Amarillo to Brownsville, as long as you’re not carrying into the usual restricted places like certain schools, secured government buildings, and some posted venues.

Texas knife laws and this OTF design

This mini OTF runs a 2-inch blade—well under the old length lines folks still talk about. The law now recognizes “location-restricted knives,” generally over 5.5 inches of blade, not what this is. For most everyday carry in your truck, pocket, or pack, this size sits squarely in the safe zone for typical adult carry under current Texas statutes. Still, posted signs and specific city policies can add wrinkles, so it’s smart to know your daily route.

What matters most to a Texas buyer is this: you can own, carry, and use an automatic OTF like this Blush Bolt across most everyday situations, without dancing around outdated switchblade fears. It’s a legal, practical tool, not a back-room curiosity.

Mini OTF Knife Performance in Texas Work and Weekend Life

This isn’t a hunting blade you take out twice a year. It’s the small OTF that lives on you every day. That 2-inch matte black dagger blade handles the quiet jobs that stack up in Texas life: cutting feed string in a barn outside Weatherford, stripping tape off cases in a San Marcos distribution bay, opening sealed packages dropped on a front porch in Plano. The dagger tip gives you control for precise punctures; the plain edge glides through cardboard and plastic without tearing.

Texas-specific use cases where this mini OTF earns its keep

Out at a Hill Country rental cabin, you use it to slice twine off firewood bundles and trim plastic from new gear. At a rodeo, it’s there for cutting tags, tape, and loose rope ends without hauling out a big fixed blade. Night shift at a Houston hospital, it hides in a scrub pocket, opening supply boxes and cutting bandage wrap between calls—fast, clean, quiet. It’s the OTF knife that doesn’t look out of place clipped to a handbag, clipped to gym shorts, or dropped into the shallow pocket of a pair of shorts headed to the lake.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Can Carry Discreetly

Texans like capability without theater. This mini OTF knife rides that line. Closed, it’s only 3.5 inches, about the length of a truck key fob. The sleek, straight handle slides past pocket seams and doesn’t chew up the lining. The low-ride clip keeps it buried deep, so only a sliver of pink shows above the fabric. In an office tower in downtown Austin, it reads more like a small tool than a statement piece.

The lanyard slot at the tail gives you another carry option. Thread a short cord and tie it off to a belt loop if you’re on a boat on Lake Conroe or crawling under a trailer where you can’t afford to lose it between boards. The hardware stays put—no tiny screws backing out into the carpet of your truck over time.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives—including OTF and traditional switchblades—are legal for most adults to own and carry. The main limit is on location-restricted knives, generally blades over 5.5 inches, which can’t go into certain places like some schools and secured government buildings. This mini OTF has a 2-inch blade, so it’s well under that threshold. You should still respect posted signs and specific property rules, but for everyday pocket or truck carry, this size runs comfortably legal for typical adult Texans.

Is this mini OTF knife big enough for real work in Texas?

For most daily tasks, yes. The 2-inch dagger blade is plenty for opening feed sacks, cutting hay string, slicing tape, and working through packing straps—exactly the kind of work most Texans do day in, day out. If you’re dressing a deer in West Texas, you’ll want a larger fixed blade in your kit. But for everything that happens between the lease and the job site, this mini OTF covers more than you’d think without weighing you down.

Why pick a small Texas OTF knife over a regular folder?

One-handed, straight-line deployment. In a folding knife, the blade has to swing out and lock. That can be slow or awkward in tight quarters or with gloves on. This OTF launches straight out the front and retracts with the same thumb motion, so you never change your grip. In a crowded feed store aisle in Abilene or on a swaying bus in Dallas, that clean, linear action is safer, faster, and less likely to get bumped or knocked closed while you’re working.

Picture this: late evening at a Hill Country gas station, last stop before a long dark stretch of highway. You’re leaning against the truck bed, cutting the straps off a case of bottled water you grabbed for the road. The little pink-handled OTF slides from your pocket, snaps open with a quiet, certain sound, slices clean, and vanishes back into your hand before anyone really notices. No flourish, no fuss—just a sharp, legal tool that fits the way Texans actually live, work, and travel.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.5
Weight (oz.) 2.42
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Button Type Thumb slide
Theme None
Double/Single Action Double
Pocket Clip Yes