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Patriot Skull Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Black Wood

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13.99


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Heritage Skull Street Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Wood

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2104/image_1920?unique=66b753b

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Late run down I-35, truck humming, that stretch of dark between towns where you like knowing you’re not empty-handed. This automatic stiletto rides flat in your pocket, flag-and-skull scales over black wood, polished bayonet blade tucked away. Push the bolster and it snaps to attention, safety right where your thumb expects it. Not a toy, not a showpiece—just the kind of automatic stiletto knife Texans keep close when the road gets long and quiet.

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SB198SK

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Heritage Skull Steel on a Texas Night Run

The highway between small towns has its own kind of quiet. Out past the last gas station glow, the sky opens up and the only light is your headlights and the dash. That’s where a knife like this earns its keep. The Heritage Skull Street Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Wood doesn’t ride in a display case; it rides in a front pocket, a truck console, or next to a registration in a glove box.

Flag and skull laid over dark wood, polished bayonet blade sleeping behind bright bolsters, push-button set where your thumb finds it without looking. It looks like something a man might pass down, but it opens like a modern automatic stiletto knife should—fast, controlled, no guessing.

Why This Automatic Stiletto Belongs in a Texas Pocket

A lot of blades look good on a screen and feel wrong in the hand. This one was built for real pockets and real days. Closed, it sits right around five inches, slim enough to disappear inside a pair of starched jeans or behind a belt in the small of your back. At under five ounces, you forget it’s there until you need it.

The bayonet blade stretches out to just under four inches, enough reach to slice through thick feed bags, nylon tie-downs, or stubborn hose in the heat behind a barn. The polished steel takes a clean edge and wipes down quick after cutting tape, cardboard, or that bit of old fuel line you should have swapped out months ago.

That weathered flag and skull on the handle isn’t just flash. Against the black wood inlay, it gives you a little texture and a lot of grip. Polished bolsters cap each end, so when you choke up on the handle, your fingers find solid metal and the guard keeps you from slipping forward if your hands are wet or slick with oil.

Texas Automatic Carry, Without Guesswork

There was a time you had to think twice about carrying an automatic stiletto in Texas. That time is gone. Texas cleaned up its knife laws—first opening the door on automatics and switchblades, then lifting old blade-length limits for most day-to-day carry. An automatic stiletto knife like this is legal to own and carry across the state for most adults, as long as you’re not walking into the short list of restricted locations where all kinds of weapons get turned away.

So in practice, that means you can slide this automatic stiletto into your pocket before heading to the lease outside Junction, clip it inside your waistband for a night at a roadhouse north of Houston, or keep it in the door pocket on a long haul from Amarillo down to Laredo. You’re not hiding a gray-area tool; you’re carrying a lawful automatic knife that fits the way Texans actually live and work now.

Automatic Stiletto Confidence Under Texas Law

The knife’s push-button deployment and internal spring make it a true automatic, not an assisted folder and not an OTF. Texas law treats these the same way as other knives for most adults, so you’re not stuck explaining every feature if a deputy asks what you’re carrying during a roadside check west of Abilene. It’s a straight answer: an automatic stiletto knife for everyday tasks.

Built for the Way Texans Actually Use a Knife

Out here, a knife is a tool first. The long, narrow bayonet blade on this automatic stiletto is honest about what it does well. It pierces and slices in tight spaces: cutting zip ties behind a trailer light, trimming a bit of vinyl inside a truck cab, breaking down boxes in a hot metal warehouse with the big door rolled up and the fans barely keeping pace.

The polished finish keeps friction low moving through rope or plastic. When you’re cutting baling twine with one hand while you steady a kicking calf with the other, that matters. The plain edge means you can sharpen it clean on a simple stone by the shop, no special gear needed.

The safety sits just off the button, right where your thumb rests when you draw. Slide it forward and you lock the automatic stiletto knife closed, so it doesn’t fire in your pocket while you’re climbing into a lifted truck or stepping over a low fence. Slide it back and one push sends the blade out with a sharp, mechanical snap you can feel in your grip.

Texas Use Cases That Make Sense

Picture it hooked on the inside of your pocket at a Friday night football game in West Texas, clipped low enough that only a bit of polished metal shows. You’re not waving it around; you’re the person a buddy turns to when the tailgate cooler strap knots up or the new banner needs a line cut and retied.

Or picture a Sunday afternoon in a driveway outside San Antonio, hood up, heat rolling off the engine. You reach for this automatic stiletto from the console, pop the safety without looking, and punch through a brittle length of old hose so you can make a clean cut for the replacement. Wipe the blade on a rag, hit the button, and it’s gone again.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Stiletto Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas law treats OTF knives and other automatics, including this stiletto-style automatic knife, as legal to own and carry for most adults. The old switchblade ban is gone. The main limits now are certain restricted locations—schools, secure government buildings, and a few other posted areas where all kinds of weapons are off-limits. Outside those spots, a Texan can carry an automatic or OTF knife every day without running afoul of state law.

Will this automatic stiletto hold up to real Texas heat and dust?

The polished steel blade and hardware are easy to wipe down after a shift in a dusty Panhandle yard or a day on caliche outside Midland. Keep a little oil in the pivot and around the push-button, and the spring-driven action stays crisp even if it lives in a truck console. The black wood inlay and coated flag scales aren’t fussy—you can sweat on them, drop them in red dirt, and clean them up with a rag and mild cleaner.

Should I pick this automatic stiletto over a bulkier work knife?

If your days are heavy on prying, chopping, or batoning through mesquite, a thick work blade makes sense. But if you want something slim that carries clean in jeans, opens fast with one hand, and handles most real-world Texas cutting—feed bags, straps, cardboard, plastic, light rope—this automatic stiletto knife is the better call. It gives you reach and speed without printing hard in a front pocket or dragging your pants down on a long, hot day.

Flag, Skull, and Steel in a Texas Moment

Picture yourself easing off a farm-to-market road onto a caliche drive as the sun drops behind a windmill. You kill the engine, step out into that heavy dusk, and feel the weight of the automatic stiletto knife riding easy in your pocket—the smooth black wood, the worn-flag graphic, the skull staring back when you draw.

You thumb the safety, press the button, and the blade snaps out with that sharp, final sound that tells you it’s locked and ready. Maybe you’re cutting twine on a hay bale, maybe you’re trimming a bit of hose, maybe you’re just opening a package that’s sat on the porch all day in the heat. Either way, this automatic stiletto doesn’t make a speech about who you are. It just does the work, Texas-style—quiet, fast, and sure.

Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 8.875
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.52
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Bayonet
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Push
Theme USA Flag
Safety Yes
Pocket Clip Yes