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Green-Eyed Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

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3.99


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Grim Talon Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/754/image_1920?unique=bae54bb

13 sold in last 24 hours

East of Abilene, parked under stadium lights, this comb knife looks like nothing but skull art in your console. Slide the cover, hook the ring, and a curved black hawkbill shows up ready to open feed bags, cut twine, or slice tape. Lightweight, flat, and easy to hide in a pocket organizer, it carries like a comb and works like a small karambit. For Texans who like their tools quiet, a little mean, and useful.

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  • Overall Length (inches)
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Out behind a metal shop outside Weatherford, a truck door swings open and something small hits the gravel. Under the dome light it just looks like a skull-covered comb, green eyes catching the glow. You bend down, thumb the cover, and realize there’s more going on here. The ring finds your finger, the cover slides away, and a black curved blade is sitting in your hand like it always belonged there.

Why this hidden comb knife fits Texas carry culture

Most folks here already keep a blade handy—pocket clip on jeans, fixed knife in the truck, maybe a multitool in the console. This one fills a different lane. It rides flat in a back pocket, toiletry bag, desk drawer, or center console looking like a loud little comb and nothing else. When you slide that cover and the hawkbill steps out, it becomes a compact, curved utility knife that doesn’t scream for attention until you want it to.

The full skull graphic with green eyes is loud enough to be fun in a high school locker in Lubbock or a gear drawer in an Austin apartment, but the tool itself stays small and light—about 7.5 inches open, 4.5 inches closed, and just over an ounce. You’re not hauling weight. You’re carrying a trick piece that can still open feed sacks, slice straps, or crack into a taped-up box in a San Antonio warehouse at the end of a long shift.

Grim Talon design: comb on the outside, karambit on the inside

On the surface, it’s a simple black comb with a glossy skull pattern. Under that cover is a curved hawkbill blade that behaves more like a small karambit than a novelty. The arc lets you bite into nylon tie-downs, baling twine, or shrink wrap without skating off. That curve helps when you’re cutting toward you in tight quarters—inside a trailer, under a workbench, or in the back of a dusty garage in Kerrville where there’s barely any light.

The finger ring is what makes it feel right in hand. You hook it and the grip locks without needing to think about it. Sweaty hands in August heat near Corpus, gloves half on in a Panhandle wind, or just cold stiff fingers in a Hill Country January—once that ring is seated, the knife isn’t going anywhere unless you let it. It’s a simple kind of security that doesn’t depend on texture or gimmicks.

How Texans actually put this comb knife to work

This isn’t a ranch chore main blade. It’s the small, hidden tool that lives where other knives don’t fit. In a Dallas office, it’s the desk drawer blade that opens boxes and cuts plastic banding without raising eyebrows. In a college backpack in San Marcos, it rides in a side pocket as a comb until a package shows up or a piece of cord needs trimming for a project.

At 3 inches of black-finished edge, it’s long enough to be useful, short enough to stay manageable in close quarters. The detachable comb cover works like a sheath—protecting the blade edge and hiding it in plain sight. Toss it in a dopp kit on a run from Amarillo to Houston and it looks like grooming gear, not gear gear. But when you slide it clear and let that hawkbill breathe, you’ve got cutting control that standard straight-edge comb knives don’t match.

Everyday Texas tasks, quiet little blade

Think about the work that doesn’t justify pulling your main knife. Cutting open a bag of ice at a roadside convenience store south of Waco. Popping zip ties on extension cords in a church equipment closet. Stripping a little paracord beside a campsite on the Llano River. This comb knife steps in when you want something handy, discreet, and easier to explain than a full tactical folder clipped to gym shorts.

Display piece that still earns pocket time

Collectors from El Paso to Beaumont tend to be picky. Art alone doesn’t cut it. Here, the green-eyed skull spread sells the attitude, but the hawkbill and ring sell the function. It looks good in a display case under LED lights, then disappears into a pocket organizer or glovebox and shows up again when there’s tape, cord, or plastic that needs cutting.

Texas knife law reality: what this disguised knife is—and isn’t

Texas knife laws shifted a few years back, opening the door for a lot of blades that used to ride in gray areas. Switchblades and OTFs are legal here now, and there’s no statewide ban on disguised knives like this comb design. But that doesn’t mean every location treats them the same. Anything that hides a blade inside an everyday object is going to draw extra scrutiny in certain spots.

This comb knife is a manual-opening, non-OTF design. It’s not spring-loaded, not automatic, and not a switchblade. Under state law, it falls under the broader “location-restricted knife” rules only if it crosses the usual blade length thresholds or if a specific venue has its own policy. Public schools, courthouses, secure facilities, some stadiums and event spaces across Houston, Austin, and Dallas can have stricter rules regardless of what state law allows. Local ordinances and property policies still matter.

Are disguised comb knives treated differently in Texas?

There’s no special statewide category for comb knives, belt knives, or other disguised tools. But the more a blade looks like something it’s not, the more likely security or law enforcement may want a closer look. Treat this knife like you would any other small everyday blade: know where you’re going, know the rules on that property, and don’t assume a disguise makes it invisible.

Texas OTF knife questions this comb knife bumps into

Texans looking up OTF knife Texas laws often stumble into disguised knives along the way. The short version: OTF and switchblade designs are legal statewide, subject to location rules. This comb knife isn’t an OTF, but it sits in the same mental bucket for many buyers—edgy, tactical-adjacent, and better understood when you’ve actually read the code. If you’re comfortable carrying an OTF in Texas where it’s allowed, this manual comb knife will feel tame by comparison—just remember that schools and secured areas are still a hard no.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Laws and Disguised Blades

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas removed its statewide ban on switchblades and OTF knives, so owning and carrying an OTF knife is legal under state law. The catch is locations. Schools, many government buildings, some stadiums, and secured facilities can still ban blades outright or set their own limits. City and county rules may add more restrictions in practice. If you can walk in with a regular pocket knife, an OTF usually rides the same line—but always confirm posted policies before you step through security.

Does this comb knife count as an OTF or switchblade in Texas?

No. This is a manual comb knife with a sliding cover and a hawkbill blade you deploy by hand. It doesn’t fire out the front, doesn’t rely on springs, and doesn’t have a button-activated opening. For Texas law purposes, it behaves like a small manual folder with a disguise. That doesn’t mean it’s welcome everywhere—schools and secured spaces will treat it like any other concealed blade—but it’s not classified as an OTF knife under Texas statutes.

How should I decide between a Texas OTF knife and this comb knife?

If you want fast one-handed deployment working cattle guards, cutting rope on a bay boat out of Galveston, or running night shifts at a refinery, a solid Texas OTF knife is the workhorse. If you want a light, quirky backup blade that can live in a gym bag, office drawer, or truck console without drawing much attention, this comb knife makes more sense. Many Texas buyers carry both: OTF on the belt or pocket, comb knife tucked away as a quiet second option.

Where this hidden comb knife makes the most sense in Texas life

Picture a long drive up I-35, Buc-ee’s cups in the console, a soft cooler in the back seat. This comb knife is tucked in a pocket organizer by the shifter. You grab it to cut open a stubborn snack bag, trim loose cord on a duffel, or carve through the plastic on a new piece of gear you couldn’t wait to unbox. Nobody around you sees a "weapon"—they see a skull-covered comb. You know better.

Later that week, it lives in a bathroom drawer in a Midland apartment, doing double duty as both comb and quiet cutter. It’s not the only blade you own. It’s the one you reach for when the job is small, the space is public, and you still want a little edge close at hand. In a state where most folks carry something sharper than their car keys, this Grim Talon comb knife is the little sidearm of your everyday kit—hidden, specific, and just mean enough when you need it.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Black
Handle Finish Glossy
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb