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Crusader Halo Buckle-Ready Brass Knuckles - Rainbow Finish

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9.99


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Crossfire Halo Buckle-Ready Knuckles - Rainbow Finish

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1882/image_1920?unique=6ff6575

7 sold in last 24 hours

Out on a Texas backroad or walking into Sunday supper, this buckle-ready piece rides more like a story than a weapon. The cross cutout throws light through the center while the rainbow finish shifts color with every step. Four smooth finger holes and a rounded palm bar keep it comfortable in the hand or on the belt. Built solid for collectors, display, or buckle carry where it’s legal.

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Crossfire Halo Knuckles Built for Belt, Case, and Conversation

In a small-town Texas church lot after evening service, the tailgates drop, stories start, and belt buckles say more than words. This halo knuckle buckle catches a parking-lot light, and the cross cutout in the center throws a quiet shadow across the tailgate. It rides like a statement piece, not a threat — solid in the hand, striking on the belt, and built for the collector who values faith and steel in the same breath.

The Crossfire Halo Buckle-Ready Knuckles - Rainbow Finish carry that presence. Four full-size finger holes line up clean, a smooth palm bar sits easy against the hand, and a simple buckle post lets it anchor on a belt when you want it seen. The rainbow plating shifts from blue to purple to green under a Texas sky, giving it the look of custom work without the drama.

When a Texas Buckle Does More Than Just Hold a Belt

Across Texas, a good buckle can be as personal as a brand on a gate. Some folks pick rodeo scenes, some pick cattle, some pick a cross. This piece blends that buckle tradition with the old-school shape of brass knuckles, turning a familiar silhouette into a faith-marked display you can wear or case.

The cross cutout is centered under the finger holes, not slapped on top. Light comes through it, not around it. On a belt at a San Antonio car meet or a Panhandle gun show, the design reads first as a cross-and-color buckle, only revealing its knuckle form on a second look. That balance makes it easier to wear in public spaces where you’re showing style, not starting trouble.

In the hand, the full one-piece metal construction feels substantial without being a brick. The curved palm bar tracks with the line of the hand, letting it settle in without sharp edges digging into skin. It’s the kind of piece you can pick up at the end of a long day, roll across your fingers, and then hang back on the belt or in a display case.

Buckle-Ready Halo Design for Texas Carry Culture

Texas carry culture isn’t just about what you keep tucked away. It’s about what you’re willing to wear in plain sight. The integrated belt-buckle post between the center finger holes turns these knuckles into hardware you can mount on a leather strap, hang on the wall of a Hill Country workshop, or set on a dresser beside a daily pocket knife.

On a wide West Texas work belt, the flat back keeps it from tilting or rattling as you move. The rounded front edge rolls clean over denim when you sit in a truck seat or drop onto a barstool after a day on the lease. For collectors, the buckle-ready feature gives it an easy way to display with other everyday carry and gear — not tossed loose in a drawer.

Whether it’s hanging on a pegboard in a Houston garage or riding on the belt of a Fort Worth collector headed to a show, it fits right into the Texas habit of making practical things look like they belong on display.

Texas Law, Brass Knuckles, and Where This Buckle Fits

Understanding Modern Texas Knuckles Law

Texas law used to treat brass knuckles as contraband, grouped in with other “prohibited weapons.” That changed in 2019, when the state removed knuckles from that list. As of now, carrying brass knuckles in Texas is broadly legal for adults, whether they’re in a pocket, truck console, or riding as a buckle — but there are still lines you don’t cross.

Certain locations, like schools, secured areas of airports, and some government buildings, carry additional restrictions on all kinds of weapons and defensive tools. Private property owners can also set their own rules. This buckle-ready halo knuckle is built for collection, display, and legal personal carry, but every buyer still needs to know the local ground: check city ordinances, posted signs, and any event or venue policies before walking in with it on your belt.

Texas Collector Mindset: Display First, Trouble Never

Most Texans buying a piece like this aren’t looking for a fight. They’re filling a case, finishing a belt, or adding a conversation piece to the truck dash collection. The cross motif and rainbow finish lean hard into that side of Texas culture — the part that values symbolism and showmanship more than any idea of menace.

Treat it like you would a custom buckle or a high-polish sideplate: respected, legal to own and carry under Texas law, but not something to flash in the wrong place or time. Used that way, it fits cleanly into modern Texas everyday carry habits.

Texas Use Cases: From Church Lots to Gun Shows

Sunday Best and Weekday Steel

Picture a small-town service letting out outside Abilene. Trucks pull up nose-to-nose, and the talk swings from rainfall to rifles. One man leans against his tailgate, shirt lifted just enough to show a flash of rainbow and a cross-shaped gap in the center of his buckle. Folks ask about it the same way they’d ask about a custom rig or a new OTF knife — where’d you get it, what’s the story, what else is in your collection.

Back home, it comes off the belt and lands on a cedar dresser beside a folding blade and a worn leather wallet. It’s part of the daily layout, as much identity as gear.

Gun Shows, Swap Meets, and Texas Collections

Down in Houston, Dallas, or over in Lubbock, gun shows and swap meets draw the kind of buyers who notice details. They’ll feel the weight, check the knuckle spacing from pinky to index finger, and look close at the finish for cheap shortcuts. This piece holds up under that gaze: smooth, consistent rainbow plating, cleanly machined finger holes, and a centered cross cutout that doesn’t warp or thin the metal at a stress point.

On a table full of blades, patches, and old revolvers, this buckle-ready knuckle gives a different anchor point — something that sparks questions from anyone who runs faith symbols and steel side by side in their life.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Brass Knuckles

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed most restrictions on automatic knives, including OTF designs, with earlier law changes, and then did the same for knuckles in 2019. Today, adults in Texas can legally carry OTF knives and brass knuckles in most public places. The catch is location: schools, secured government buildings, airports, and some posted private properties can restrict any weapon or defensive tool. So while state law allows both, you still need to read the signs and respect local and venue rules.

Is this Crossfire Halo better as a buckle or as a pocket carry?

In Texas, it earns its keep as a buckle or display piece first. The integrated buckle post makes it simple to mount on a solid leather belt, where the cross and rainbow finish can actually be seen. Pocket carry is possible, but on a hot Austin night or a long day working around San Angelo, having it on the belt keeps it accessible without dragging in a pocket or printing through thinner fabric.

How does a Texas buyer decide if this belongs in their collection?

If your gear says something about who you are — faith-forward, unapologetically bold, and unafraid of color — this belongs. If you already run an OTF knife in your truck, a traditional folder on your belt, and keep a small collection of buckles or knuckles in a case, this Crossfire Halo gives you a bridge piece. It’s for the Texan who wants a legal, display-ready knuckle that doesn’t look like everyone else’s dull metal.

Where This Crossfire Halo Truly Belongs

Picture stepping out of a truck at dusk outside Kerrville, gravel crunching under your boots. You close the door, your shirt shifts, and the rainbow cross buckle throws one last flash of color before the sun drops. You know the weight of it in your hand, the feel of the smooth palm bar, the way it hangs clean on your belt back in town. It’s not there to prove anything. It’s there because it fits — your faith, your steel, and the way Texas lets a person carry both in plain sight when they know the law and know themselves.

Theme Holy Cross
Material Metal
Color Rainbow