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Civic Blush Micro Dagger OTF Knife - Pink Zinc

Price:

20.99


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Civic Blush Micro Dagger OTF Knife - Pink Zinc

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7522/image_1920?unique=f9efac9

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Late run to H‑E‑B, truck console full, and that one stubborn blister pack won’t tear. This compact Texas OTF knife rides small in your pocket, flicks out with a thumb on the slider, and that 1.99-inch dagger blade makes quick work of plastic, cord, or tape. The pink zinc handle doesn’t vanish in a dark cab or deep purse. Quiet, compliant, easy to find when you actually need an edge.

20.99 20.99 USD 20.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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Micro Control When Texas Days Get Busy

Rush hour on Loop 410, gas receipt in your teeth, you’re wrestling a strapped-down load in the bed. You don’t need a big belt knife. You need something you can fish out of your pocket, walk the thumb up a slider, and make one clean cut without thinking about it. That’s where this micro dagger out-the-front knife earns its keep.

The blade is just under two inches, so it stays in that compact, easily managed range while still giving you a true dagger profile. Single-action out-the-front means you drive the blade forward with the slider, get your cut done, then reset it with both hands when you’re back in the cab or at the bench. It’s purpose-built for the kind of small, constant cutting jobs that stack up across a Texas workday.

Why This Texas OTF Knife Stays Where You Put It

In a Houston parking garage or a Lubbock feed store lot, the last thing you want is a knife that disappears into the same black hole as spare change and old receipts. The bright pink zinc handle on this Texas OTF knife is impossible to lose against the dark of a truck console, purse, or backpack. Your eye catches it fast, even under a dim dome light.

Closed, it sits at 3.375 inches. In hand, it opens to 5.5 inches, giving you just enough handle for a controlled three-finger grip without printing like a full-size tactical blade. At a touch over three ounces, the zinc handle carries with a little weight, so you know it’s there when you slide a hand into your pocket. The pocket clip keeps it riding high on the seam of jeans or scrubs, which matters when you’re climbing in and out of a hot truck all day.

Compact OTF Knife Texas Carriers Can Actually Use Daily

Out on a Hill Country lease, you’re cutting baling twine on a feeder. In a Dallas office, you’re breaking down shipping boxes by the copy room. This compact OTF knife Texas buyers reach for is built for those simple, steady cuts that don’t justify a big fixed blade.

The matte silver steel dagger blade slides straight out the front in a clean line. No flipper tab to snag, no big side-swing to manage in tight spaces. You walk your thumb up the textured slider, feel it engage, and the blade locks forward. Plain edges on both sides of the dagger profile mean smooth cuts through tape, blister packs, plastic straps, and light cord. It’s the kind of blade you use ten times a day without thinking about it—until the one time you don’t have it.

Texas Carry Culture and OTF Reality

Folks here remember when spring-loaded blades and switch-style knives were a legal headache. That shifted. Under current Texas law, automatic and out-the-front designs like this one are legal to own and carry for most adults, so long as you’re not somewhere that bans blades altogether, like certain schools, secure facilities, or posted government buildings. The old worry about just having an OTF in your pocket in San Antonio or Amarillo has eased off, replaced by the usual common-sense rules.

The short 1.99-inch blade keeps this knife well within that small, everyday-use range. It’s not a big fighting knife you’re wearing on your hip into a courthouse; it’s an honest pocket tool for packages, zip ties, and the day’s chores. That’s how most Texans actually carry now: a small, quick knife in the pocket or purse, ready when a job shows up—from a stubborn feed sack to a kid’s toy zip-tied into a box.

Understanding Single-Action OTF in a Texas Context

Single-action means you drive the blade out under spring power using the slider, then retract it manually. In practical terms, you get that satisfying, fast deployment when you need it—say, cutting rope at a lakeside campsite on Travis or slicing duct tape on an HVAC job in Waco—but you reset it when you’re back in a controlled spot.

That design keeps the mechanism straightforward and predictable. Dust, grit, and sweat from a West Texas jobsite are less likely to foul a simple path than a more complex double-action build. If it does gum up, a Texas dealer can get inside this hardware with common tools, clean it out, and put it back into rotation.

Blade and Build Built for Real Texas Chores

This isn’t a glass-case collector. It’s a tool with a steel dagger blade and a zinc handle meant to ride hard in a pocket or bag. The matte finish on the blade shrugs off glare in bright Panhandle sun and won’t scream for attention when you’re using it in a busy office or warehouse.

The blade’s narrow profile helps it slide under tight knots and into plastic clamshell seams. Twins edges and a centered point mean you can pierce and then pull in either direction without rotating your grip—useful when you’re cutting shrink-wrap on pallets in a San Antonio distribution center or opening water-softener salt bags in a garage in Round Rock.

The zinc handle gives you a solid feel. It’s not feather-light; it’s honest metal with a matte surface and subtle grooves that help your fingers settle, even when your hands are slick from sweat or shop grease. Torx screws and a stout pocket clip round things out, giving you a knife that can handle being tossed into a toolbox, clipped to the inside of a ranch jacket, or carried loose in a purse without babying it.

Texas Use Cases That Suit a Micro Dagger OTF

Picture a Sunday at a youth ball field outside Katy. You’re the one they hand the tangled net to. Out comes this small OTF, blade forward with a thumb push, and you’re trimming nylon threads without sawing or fraying. Or a late-night Costco run in Austin: you get home, tailgate down, and need to open a tower of taped boxes. This knife clears that pile before the ice cream melts.

It’s the tool for people who live more in parking lots, fields, garages, and shop floors than in boardrooms. Not for show—just to get small, annoying jobs done fast.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, out-the-front and other automatic knives are generally legal for adults to own and carry. The old switchblade ban is gone. The big rules now are about blade length in certain restricted locations and obvious sensitive places—schools, secure government buildings, and posted areas still control knives. For most everyday Texas carry, a compact OTF like this, under two inches, rides comfortably within what people actually use and law enforcement usually sees as a tool.

Is this micro dagger OTF knife practical for city carry in Texas?

Yes. In Houston, Austin, or Dallas, this knife’s strength is its size and visibility. It’s short enough not to drag or print hard in lighter pants, and the bright pink handle looks more like a modern tool than a combat piece. You can clip it inside joggers on a late-night run to the corner store or drop it into a purse for everyday errands. When you need it—cutting a loose thread, cracking plastic wrap, opening deliveries—it gives you a fast, neat cut without turning heads.

How do I choose between this and a larger Texas OTF knife?

Ask what you really cut. If your days are more mail, packages, and plastic than heavy rope or field work, this micro dagger out-the-front is enough. It’s easier to carry in summer when you’re in shorts, and less likely to get left on a dresser because it felt bulky. If you’re working fence line, processing game, or expect to lean on a blade for bigger, sustained cuts, then a larger Texas OTF knife with a longer blade and deeper grip makes sense. Most Texans end up starting with a compact like this for daily carry, then adding a larger blade for truck or ranch duty.

First Use on a Texas Evening

Sun’s dropping behind a line of live oaks outside a rental house in New Braunfels. You’ve got folding chairs still in plastic, kids’ toys zip-tied to cardboard, and a cooler that needs its straps cut before the ice goes in. You thumb this pink-handled knife out of your pocket, walk the slider forward, and the blade is there—sharp, straight, and small enough to work close without nicking anything that matters.

By the time the sky goes purple, the trash bag’s full of cardboard, plastic, and tape, and the knife is back in your pocket, a thin rectangle of metal you barely feel. It’s not the loudest thing you own. It’s just one more tool that fits the way Texans actually live—busy, moving, and always needing a clean edge close to hand.

Blade Length (inches) 1.99
Overall Length (inches) 5.5
Closed Length (inches) 3.375
Weight (oz.) 3.05
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Zinc
Button Type Slider
Theme None
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes