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Gravemark Precision Skull Throwing Knife Set - Black & Silver

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6.99


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Grave Rhythm Balanced Throwing Knife Set - Black & Silver

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Late light over a Hill Country backstop, plywood chewed up from yesterday’s throws. This balanced throwing knife set rides in its nylon sheath on your belt, three 6.5-inch skull-marked blades waiting their turn. Full stainless construction, double-edged spear points, and honest weight turn wild guesses into repeatable sticks. Black and silver stay low-profile, but the grouping on the board does the talking.

6.99 6.99 USD 6.99

TK029365SL

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  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Set Count
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Balanced Throwers Built for Long Evenings on Texas Ground

Wind drops off over a caliche lot outside city limits. Somebody’s backed a truck up to a plywood target, headlights washing the board in a flat white. This is where the Grave Rhythm Balanced Throwing Knife Set - Black & Silver feels at home—three matched throwers riding quiet on your belt until it’s time to work on your grouping.

Each knife runs 6.5 inches, full stainless from tip to skull-marked tail. The weight lands right in the hand, not so heavy it wears you out, not so light it flies wild in a West Texas cross-breeze. Matte-black spear points and silver graphics give you a clean visual line from palm to plywood, so you see rotation as much as you feel it.

Why Throwing Knives Like This Earn Their Place in Texas Training

Out behind a metal shop in Lubbock or under live oaks east of Austin, practice is repetitive on purpose. A balanced throwing knife set has to help you build that rhythm, not fight you every throw. These knives keep it simple: double-edged spear points, straight profile, and skeletonized handles that tell your fingers exactly where they are without needing scales or rubber to hide mistakes.

The matte black finish shrugs off glare when you’re throwing into the sun at a Hill Country lease, and the silver arrow line down the center of each blade gives you a quick visual on spin. Stainless steel soaks up abuse—misses off the board, glancing hits on rebar-framed stands, gravel impacts when you’re dialing in new distances. Wipe them down, keep throwing.

Carrying a Throwing Knife Set Quietly in Texas Life

In Texas, this kind of gear lives in range bags, truck consoles, and back room lockers more than it rides in front pockets. The nylon sheath on this throwing knife set is built for that reality. It stacks all three blades in one slim package, with a belt loop that rides flat against jeans or work pants when you’re walking from the truck to the back of the property.

Heading out to a buddy’s place off a county road outside San Angelo, the sheath disappears between a tool roll and a box of clays in the truck bed. When you step out, you can either thread it on your belt or hang it on a hook by the target. The compact 6.5-inch length keeps it from feeling like camp gear or a big fighting knife. It’s a purpose-built throwing knife set, and that’s how it carries.

Texas Knife Law and Where a Throwing Knife Set Fits

Texas knife laws have loosened over the years, but it still pays to know where a throwing knife set belongs. These are fixed-blade throwers—no springs, no OTF mechanism, no folders. Under Texas law, that matters. You’re not dealing with an automatic or a switchblade here, just straightforward throwing knives built for sport and training.

Even with that, Texans keep this kind of blade where it makes sense: at home ranges in the suburbs of San Antonio, on private land outside Abilene, or at controlled throwing lanes. You bring them out when there’s a safe backstop, a clear range, and a plan for how many throws before you patch the board. That’s how a serious throwing knife set fits into Texas knife culture—treated like a tool for practice, not a toy to wave around.

Reading Texas Spaces for Safe Throwing Practice

Drive any farm-to-market road long enough and you’ll see spots that look perfect for a board and a set of balanced throwers—old barns, empty lots, windbreaks behind houses. A knife like this wants a clean lane and a backstop that won’t send steel bouncing back at you. A stacked hay bale wall outside Amarillo, a thick fence post line in the Brazos bottom, or a treated 4x4 frame behind a shop all do the job.

The compact weight—about 2 ounces per knife—means ricochets are less violent than with heavy camp blades, but they still demand respect. The double-edged spear point digs deep when you hit square, whether you’re at ten feet in a Houston warehouse lane or stretching to twenty in a pasture with mesquite watching from the sides.

From Backyard Boards to Structured Texas Throwing Nights

More Texans are setting up regular throwing nights—after-work sessions behind a garage in Corpus, Friday evenings at a buddy’s place outside Waco. This balanced throwing knife set travels easy between all of those. Skull motif or not, the performance stays calm: predictable spin, repeatable stick, and enough durability to live through missed throws on steel hangers and rough plywood.

Because all three knives match, you’re not chasing different weights or profiles. That consistency lets you focus on foot placement in the dust, grip pressure in the heat, and how the knife leaves your fingertips, not whether one blade flies long and the next falls short.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Balanced Throwing Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Automatic knives—including OTFs and switchblades—are legal to own and carry for most adults in Texas, thanks to law changes that removed the old switchblade ban. The main thing is respecting location restrictions and any special rules about larger blades in certain places like schools, courthouses, and some government buildings. This balanced throwing knife set isn’t an OTF knife at all—it’s a simple fixed-blade trio meant for throwing practice, which Texans usually keep on private property or at dedicated ranges.

Can I use this throwing knife set at my place outside town?

If you’ve got land outside Tyler or a few open acres near Midland, this throwing knife set is exactly the kind of tool that belongs there. As long as your backstop is safe, you’ve cleared the throwing lane, and you’re not sending blades toward a road, neighbor’s fence line, or livestock, it fits right into Texas country routines—after chores, after work, or during a slow weekend. Treat it like a firearm range: clear rules, clear zone, no distractions.

Is this better for beginners or experienced Texas throwers?

The design hits a middle ground that works for both. A new thrower in a Dallas garage lane gets consistency from the matched trio and simple spear-point profile—nothing tricky to learn around. Someone who’s been throwing for years out in the Panhandle will appreciate how the weight and balance stay honest. Three identical knives, full stainless build, double edges, and compact length let you refine your release instead of fighting the tool.

Where This Throwing Knife Set Belongs in Your Texas Routine

Picture it: evening settling in over a small place outside Brenham, cicadas going hard in the trees, board set against a stand you threw together from scrap 2x6. The nylon sheath hangs on a nail to your left. You draw one knife at a time, skull at your fingertips, black spear point aimed at a knot dead center.

Feet in the dust, you find your mark. One step, one throw, steel hits wood with that flat, satisfying knock. Again. Again. The group tightens, the outside noise dies down. In a state where tools earn their space, a balanced throwing knife set like this doesn’t shout for attention. It just works, night after night, on real Texas ground.

Overall Length (inches) 6.5
Weight (oz.) 2
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme Skull
Set Count 3
Sheath/Holster Nylon Sheath