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Ember Kanji Precision Butterfly Knife - Black & White

Price:

12.99


TriMark Precision Balance Butterfly Knife - Black Tanto
TriMark Precision Balance Butterfly Knife - Black Tanto
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Shadow Spine Flip-Tuned Butterfly Knife - Two-Tone Steel
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Ember Script Flame Butterfly Knife - Black & White

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1450/image_1920?unique=d68435a

6 sold in last 24 hours

Some nights in Houston, the air feels like it’s lit from underneath. This butterfly knife fits that mood. A black tanto blade rides between white metal handles, all streaked with red flame and kanji script. At 9 inches open with a 4-inch 440C blade and T-latch lockup, it flips smooth, looks fast, and disappears into pocket or pack until it’s time to show off some steel.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

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When Heat Hangs Low Over a Texas Street

End of August in Houston, the concrete bleeds heat long after dark. Neon off a taqueria window hits the side of a parked truck, and a hand rests on the door, fingers turning a butterfly knife over and over. Black tanto blade, white handles, red flame and kanji licking down the steel. It looks like the air feels—charged, restless, ready to move.

This isn’t a ranch knife or a deer-lease tool. This is the blade that lives in a truck console off Westheimer, in a backpack rolling through Austin, or a bedside drawer in a San Antonio apartment. A butterfly knife made for the Texan who cares as much about flip and flow as they do about edge and steel.

Why This Butterfly Knife Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

Texas has room for all kinds of blades, and this one fits the side of the state that comes alive after dark. Open, you get a full 9-inch profile, anchored by a 4-inch Japanese tanto-style blade in matte black 440C stainless. It’s enough reach to slice packaging in a Dallas warehouse, trim paracord in a Hill Country campsite, or break down boxes behind a Lubbock shop when the last customer’s gone home.

The dual-pivot butterfly action runs smooth, built on solid metal handles that stay rigid when you snap through openings and aerials. At just under 6 ounces, it has enough heft to track predictably through each rotation without feeling like a brick in your pocket. The T-latch at the tail pulls it together clean—closed in pocket as you walk a Corpus Christi pier, open and locked when you’re working a trick sequence in a Brownsville garage.

Design That Looks at Home Under a Texas Night Sky

This knife doesn’t whisper. It shows up. The blade is night-black, with red flame accents running the spine and edge, like tail lights smeared across I-35 after a storm. White kanji script near the base of the blade adds a tight, deliberate note—small marks that say someone thought about more than just color and steel.

The white metal handles carry that same flame story forward. Red licks at the pivot, then give way to diagonal black striping that feels like shadow on painted concrete. The contrast reads clean under parking-lot sodium light or in the bed of a pickup running a back road outside Waco. Flip it open and closed a few times and it stops being decoration; the graphics become landmarks your fingers learn as they roll across the handle faces.

Every surface is working: the painted metal handles take scuffs the way an old gas station door does—honest, not fragile. The black hardware stands out just enough that, when you’re tuning pivots at the kitchen table in Odessa, you can see every screw without chasing reflections.

Texas Knife Law, Balisongs, and Everyday Carry Reality

More than a few Texans still ask if they can carry a butterfly knife without catching trouble. That worry comes from old laws that used to lump certain knives together with switchblades. Those days are gone.

How Texas Law Treats Butterfly Knives Now

Under current Texas law, this butterfly knife is treated as a regular knife, not some special forbidden class. There’s no separate category for balisongs. For most adults, it’s legal to own, carry, and flip this knife across the state, from Amarillo to the Valley, as long as you respect posted restrictions in places like schools, courthouses, and certain government buildings. City rules can tack on extra limits, so it’s worth knowing how your local PD looks at visible blades in parks, buses, or venues.

Out on a San Marcos riverbank or up on a Fort Worth rooftop, this knife rides as easily as any other folder. It doesn’t spring out like an automatic; it opens because your hands make it move. That fact matters if anyone ever asks why you’re carrying it. It’s a manual knife that happens to flip.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Use Balisongs

This isn’t a dulled-out trainer. The edge is real, a plain-edged Japanese tanto grind in 440C stainless that takes a clean bevel and holds it through cardboard, tape, nylon ties, and the usual day’s work around a Houston warehouse dock. You can flip it for skill, then put it to work breaking down the pallet that paid for your lunch.

The T-latch keeps it shut when you toss it into a backpack on a DART train or drop it in a truck organizer outside Abilene. When you’re ready, one practiced motion frees the latch and the handles roll. It’s the difference between owning a knife and having one you actually enjoy carrying.

Everyday Texas Scenarios This Butterfly Knife Handles Well

Urban Nights: Parking Lots, Patios, and Back Alleys

In Dallas, after a late band load-out off Deep Ellum, this knife comes out to cut gaff tape and nylon strap, the black blade vanishing against the night while the red flame catches the alley light. Between jobs, you’re flipping it one-handed next to the van, running through openings to burn off the last of the adrenaline.

On an Austin patio, it flicks open to trim stray threads off a guitar strap or break down beer cases before the barback hauls them out. Nobody mistakes it for a toy, but the balanced 9-inch frame and smooth pivot make it obvious you brought it for more than just a one-note flex.

Quiet Use: Garages, Driveways, and Spare Rooms

In a Katy garage, the door half-open to let the heat out, you’re running slow, methodical drill sets. The flame graphics blur into loops as the handles roll over the back of your hand. The metal takes the occasional drop to concrete without folding or bending out of alignment.

In a Panhandle spare room, where the wind rattles an old window frame, this knife is a late-night fidget tool and practice blade. You can sit on the edge of the bed, watching some game recap, working the T-latch, rolling through basic openings, closing it clean every time. It’s how you get good without burning daylight.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Texans often bundle OTF knives, switchblades, and butterfly knives into one mental bucket. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTFs and switchblades, are legal to own and carry for most adults, just like this butterfly knife. The real limits come from location-based restrictions—schools, certain government buildings, secured areas—and any posted signs or local rules. If you can carry a standard folder there, you can usually carry an OTF or balisong the same way.

Is this butterfly knife practical for everyday use in Texas?

If your days run from warehouse floors in Grand Prairie to late-night drives down 45, this knife works. The 4-inch 440C blade gives enough edge for boxes, straps, and quick utility jobs. The 9-inch open length and solid metal handles keep it stable in hand, and the T-latch keeps it shut when it rides in your pocket, pack, or truck console between tasks.

How do I decide if a flame-and-kanji balisong fits my style?

Ask where you’ll actually use it. If your life runs more office tower than loading dock, this graphic-heavy knife might stay in a drawer more than your pocket. But if you move through garages, venues, shop bays, or night shifts, a blade with this much visual character makes sense. It becomes part of how you pass time between calls, hauls, or sets—something you flip, sharpen, and show, not just carry because you feel you should.

First Night Out with This Knife in Texas

Picture a Thursday in San Antonio. The heat finally bleeds off the pavement as the sun drops behind low buildings. You’re leaning against your truck outside a strip-center bar, door cracked so the music rolls into the lot. In your hand, this butterfly knife moves—white handles flashing, red flames blurring, black blade snapping into place with a quiet, final stop.

You’re not out here to impress anybody. You’re just passing the minutes, working the pivots, feeling how the weight carries the arc. When a friend walks up with a busted strap on a case, the edge goes to work, clean and quick. No speech, no show. Just steel that looks like it belongs in this light, in this state, in your hand.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.375
Weight (oz.) 5.94
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Japanese Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material 440C stainless steel
Handle Finish Painted
Handle Material Metal
Theme Flames
Latch Type T-latch
Is Trainer No