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Cupcake Cotton Candy Quick-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Pink Aluminum Blue Blade

Price:

15.99


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Cotton Candy Flick Quick-Deploy Mini OTF Knife - Pink Aluminum Blue Blade

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4762/image_1920?unique=b1cc6fb

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Late afternoon in a Hill Country parking lot, you thumb the front switch and this mini OTF snaps to life with a blue flash. The pink anodized handle feels small but sure, more fun than fierce, easy to carry in shorts or a clutch. At just over three inches closed, it tucks into a pocket, truck tray, or purse organizer without printing. It’s the quick-deploy, candy-colored OTF Texans clip on when they want something sharp that doesn’t take itself too seriously.

15.99 15.99 USD 15.99

SB104ZSPD

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
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  • Theme
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Cotton Candy Flick Mini OTF in Texas Hands

You’re walking out of a Friday night game in a small Central Texas town. Parking lot’s dark, air still warm, and you feel the little pink handle resting against your palm. One push of the front switch and that blue spear point jumps out, clean and sure, no drama, no noise beyond the click. It looks like candy, but it acts like a real mini OTF knife you trust.

This isn’t the big ranch blade that lives on your belt. This is the light, quick pocket piece that rides along anywhere in Texas you go — from a Houston parking garage to a Lubbock coffee run — easy to carry, easy to draw, and easy to explain if anyone asks.

OTF Knife Texas Carry: Small, Quick, and Easy to Live With

In Texas, a knife either fits your daily rhythm or it ends up in a drawer. This mini OTF knife does its work by disappearing until you need it. At about 3.25 inches closed, it vanishes into the coin pocket of a pair of Wranglers, the organizer sleeve of a ranch bag, or the console tray of a Dallas commuter truck.

The front switch is bright blue and easy to find by feel when you’re not looking down — sliding open with a short, positive stroke and locking up with a satisfying stop. Blade comes back the same way, controlled and safe, so you’re not fumbling with a liner lock in a tight space. On a crowded Austin light rail car or a busy Buc-ee’s aisle, that matters. You can open, cut, and close without drawing eyes.

Playful Look, Real Blade: How It Cuts in Texas Life

The blue Ti-Ni spear point doesn’t shout tactical, but it still does the jobs Texas days hand you. Opening taped boxes at a San Antonio warehouse, cutting the plastic straps off a feed sack in a Panhandle barn, trimming a loose thread before a downtown Fort Worth dinner — the plain edge steel blade handles all of it without complaint.

The spear point tip gives you controlled piercing when you’re cutting into heavy plastic or blister packs, and the short, roughly two-inch blade length keeps it nimble. The Ti-Ni finish shrugs off sweat and pocket carry, whether that pocket is in a pair of Houston scrubs or cutoffs at a river float outside New Braunfels.

The handle is pink anodized aluminum, light but solid, with sprinkle-like graphics that soften the look. That color combo does two things: it keeps the knife from looking aggressive when you produce it in public, and it makes it easy to spot when it slides between the seat and console of a dusty West Texas truck.

Texas OTF Knife Carry Culture: From Purses to Pickups

In this state, how you carry matters as much as what you carry. The pocket clip on this mini OTF knife is tuned for low-profile carry. It rides deep on the edge of a front pocket in a pair of jeans, doesn’t catch when you slide into a truck seat, and doesn’t chew up the lining of a leather purse or backpack.

The size makes it a natural backup to a bigger fixed blade you keep on the ranch, or a primary knife for someone who doesn’t want a heavy piece printing through light fabric all summer. It drops into a leggings pocket for a late-night run through a suburban neighborhood, hides in the small zipper pocket of a rodeo bag, or clips to the inside of a work apron at a Hill Country bakery — where the candy theme fits right in.

For Texans who like gear with personality, the pink-and-blue colorway sends a signal: you know your tools, but you don’t need every knife to look like it just came off a SWAT belt.

Texas Knife Law Confidence with a Mini OTF

Texas used to draw hard lines around switchblades and automatics. That changed. As of current Texas law, automatic knives and OTF knives are legal to own and carry, with blade length being the main concern in restricted places. This mini OTF sits at about two inches of blade, well under the limits that tie into the “location-restricted knife” rules.

That short blade length matters when you're walking into a San Antonio school event, a Houston hospital, or any other spot where a long blade would turn into a problem. You still need to respect federal buildings and posted locations, but for everyday Texas carry — from grocery runs in Waco to gas stops along I-35 — this mini OTF knife keeps you solidly in practical territory.

The small footprint and friendly look also mean it won't spike concern the way a big black tactical auto might. It still deploys with backbone, still locks up, but it does it in a way that fits modern Texas knife culture: capable, legal, and not looking for trouble.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Ask: Does It Hold Up?

Someone who's carried knives across this state for decades will tell you: build matters more than paint. Beneath the candy colors, this mini OTF knife uses steel for the blade, anodized aluminum for the handle, Torx construction, and a positive front-switch mechanism. It's built to ride in hot trucks, get dropped on concrete in a San Marcos parking lot, and still fire the next time you thumb the switch.

The lanyard hole at the handle end gives you options. Tie in a short fob and hang it from the inside of a bag pocket, clip it to a badge reel if you work nights in a downtown ER, or tether it in a kayak crate on Lady Bird Lake so it doesn't vanish when you reach for it with wet hands.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other switchblades are legal to own and carry. The main issue is blade length in certain locations; knives with blades over 5.5 inches become “location-restricted knives” and can't be carried in specific places like schools and some government buildings. This mini OTF sits well under that length, which gives everyday Texas carriers more peace of mind. Always check for any local rules or posted signs where you live and work.

Is this mini OTF knife too small for real Texas use?

Not if you know what you're asking it to do. This knife isn't meant to dress a Hill Country hog or baton firewood at a Panhandle lease. It's built for the thousand small cuts that fill a modern Texas day: packages on a porch in Katy, tag ends on hay twine, zip ties around cables in a Midland shop, stubborn plastic clamshells in a Plano garage. For that work, the compact size is an advantage — quick in the hand, quick back out of sight.

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

A full-size Texas OTF knife gives you more reach and more steel, but it also brings more weight, more bulk, and more attention when you use it in public. This mini OTF is for Texans who want automatic deployment without the footprint: people who carry in gym shorts, business slacks, scrubs, or summer dresses, or who already have a bigger blade stashed in the truck or on the ranch. It's the second knife that ends up being the first one you actually use.

First Click, Texas Night

Picture a warm night outside a small-town dance hall, gravel under your boots and distant music leaking through old walls. You step toward your truck, feel the smooth, pink aluminum under your thumb, and send a blue flash out the front with one clean push. Quick cut, quick close, back in the pocket before the door swings open again. No weight, no fuss, just a small OTF knife that fits the way Texans really live — ready when you need it, quiet when you don't.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 5.25
Closed Length (inches) 3.25
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Ti-Ni
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Anodized
Handle Material Aluminum
Button Type Front-Switch
Theme Cupcake
Pocket Clip Yes