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Shadowflow Tactical Butterfly Knife - Black Steel

Price:

23.99


Old-World Vindicator Spring-Assisted Stiletto Knife - Wood Handle
Old-World Vindicator Spring-Assisted Stiletto Knife - Wood Handle
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Silver Flow Precision Butterfly Knife - Satin Steel
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Midnight Pivot Control Butterfly Knife - Black Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8789/image_1920?unique=66fa876

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Hot evening, truck cooling in a H-E-B lot, you’re working flips more than cuts. This all-black butterfly knife rides solid in the pocket and opens on Teflon bushings, smooth as a gate hinge after fresh oil. Stainless handles and clip point blade take scratches, not excuses. For Texans who like their practice steel to feel like real work steel.

23.99 23.99 USD 23.99

BFJL03B

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
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  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
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When a Butterfly Knife Belongs in a Texas Pocket

End of shift outside a warehouse in Laredo, heat still coming off the concrete. A couple of hands lean on tailgates, talking trucks and pay. One of them pulls this all-black butterfly knife from his pocket. No flash, no color, just matte black steel and the steady rhythm of clean flips cutting through the road noise.

This isn’t a flea market toy. It’s a solid stainless butterfly knife with a 3.5-inch black clip point blade and matching CNC-machined handles. It feels like something that could ride in a Texas work truck for years, and still flip true at the end of the day.

Why This Butterfly Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Texans like tools that do more than one thing. This butterfly knife flips smooth enough to practice tricks on a slow night, but the all-steel build and clip point blade make it a real cutting tool when you need it.

Open, you’ve got 8.25 inches of blacked-out stainless in hand. Closed, it sits at 4.75 inches — short enough to disappear in jeans, a work shirt pocket, or that spot in the truck console where your change and receipts live. At 6.35 ounces, it has honest weight, the kind you feel through gloves when you’re standing in a West Texas wind trying to cut twine or tape without fumbling.

The long oval cutouts in the CNC-machined handles keep it from feeling like a brick, and give your fingers landmarks as you flip. The latch snaps shut with a clean bite, so it stays closed while you’re climbing a ladder, stepping into a blind, or crawling under a trailer.

Texas Buyers Who Choose a Butterfly Knife Over a Folder

Not everyone in Texas wants a spring-assist or an automatic in their pocket. Some prefer the control and rhythm of a butterfly knife. You can practice your opening on the tailgate in a Fort Worth parking lot, on a porch in Nacogdoches, or out by the pit in San Antonio — same tool, different day, same steady feel.

The Teflon bushings in this knife matter more than any marketing line. When you flip it open, it doesn’t chatter or grind; it swings. Those large starbit pivot screws lock that action down so it doesn’t get sloppy after a month of dust, sweat, and pocket carry. You can break it down and tune it if you want, or just keep flipping and let the steel wear in.

For a lot of Texas buyers, this sits between a showpiece and a pure work knife. It’s the one you keep on you because it feels right in the hand, and it doesn’t look out of place next to a set of keys and a beat-up wallet.

Understanding Butterfly Knife Laws the Way Texans Actually Carry

Knife laws here changed a few years back, and plenty of people still ask if they can carry a butterfly knife the same way they wonder about an OTF or switchblade. The answer, for adults, is straightforward.

Texas Size Rules and Where They Still Matter

Texas law now focuses on blade length and certain "location-restricted" places, not the opening mechanism. This butterfly knife has a 3.5-inch blade, which keeps it under the 5.5-inch line that matters for everyday carry across most of the state. That means a grown Texan can usually carry it in the pocket, in the truck, or on the belt without it bumping into the "location-restricted" category that covers things like schools, courthouses, or secure government buildings.

You still need to respect posted rules, private property policies, and any place that bans blades altogether. A bouncer in Austin or a security guard in Houston can turn you away whether your knife is legal or not. But as far as state law goes, this style and length fit the way most Texans actually move through their day.

Why Some Texans Like a Butterfly Knife for Practice

Plenty of folks here pick up a butterfly knife to practice manipulation more than to cut rope. In a College Station apartment or a garage in Amarillo, you can work on openings and catches between shifts, putting in quiet reps. The weight and balance of this all-steel build give you feedback you can feel — it rewards clean technique and punishes sloppy work without feeling flimsy.

That’s the difference between a throwaway balisong and this one. The stainless handles, black-coated blade, and tight pivots give you a platform you can learn on for years, not weeks.

Performance Where Texas Actually Uses a Butterfly Knife

On a lease road outside Midland, you’re cutting open a pallet wrap that should’ve been removed before it ever left the yard. In a Houston warehouse, it’s plastic strap and cardboard. In a Hill Country backyard, it’s twine, hose, and feed sacks. This butterfly knife’s plain-edge clip point steps into all of that without complaining.

The stainless steel blade takes a clean edge and shrugs off sweat, humidity, and the kind of pocket grit that builds up when your days run long. The black matte finish knocks down glare and hides the scuffs that come with work. You’ll see the marks, but they just make it yours.

The latch is simple but effective. It locks closed when you’re crawling under a truck and keeps the blade from drifting open in your pocket on a long drive from San Angelo to Abilene. When you’re ready to flip, pop the latch off and let the handles roll — the action feels like a well-oiled gate on a cattle fence outside Kerrville.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Switchblades and OTF knives used to be a problem under older Texas law, but that changed. These days, for adults, the state doesn’t ban OTF, automatic, or butterfly knives by type. What matters most is blade length and where you take it. A knife with a blade under 5.5 inches, like this 3.5-inch butterfly, is generally treated as an everyday carry tool under state law. Some places still restrict blades altogether or set their own rules, and "location-restricted" areas exist for larger blades, so it’s smart to check local policies and respect signs and security instructions.

Is this butterfly knife practical for real work in Texas?

Yes. It may be a balisong, but it’s built like a work knife. All-stainless construction, 3.5-inch plain-edge clip point, and 6.35 ounces of honest weight make it more than a trick toy. It will cut tape, cord, hose, strapping, and feed bags from El Paso docks to East Texas barns. The smooth Teflon bushings mean the action stays consistent even after dust, sweat, and daily pocket carry.

Why choose this over a standard folding knife for Texas carry?

Some Texans like the simple open-and-cut of a folder. Others want a knife that gives them something to do with their hands during slow stretches — at a job site, on a night shift, or out by the smoker. This butterfly knife offers both: you get controlled flipping when you have time to kill, and a reliable 3.5-inch blade when you need to cut something fast. If you want a knife that feels solid, looks quiet, and still lets you practice skill, this fits that lane.

Where This Butterfly Knife Makes Sense in Your Texas Day

Picture a cool front finally rolling through after a long week of heat. You’re in a camp chair outside Llano, fire settling to coals, boots dusty, truck parked just close enough to light the edge of camp. You pull this matte black butterfly knife from your pocket. The latch clicks free, the handles roll, and the blade settles open with that soft, certain stop you only get from tuned steel.

You cut cord for a tarp line, slice open a bag of charcoal, then spend a few quiet minutes working through openings and catches while the brisket rests. No showboating, no bright colors, just black steel moving clean through Hill Country air. This is the kind of knife a Texan carries when they want their gear to work hard, flip smooth, and stay out of the spotlight.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 8.25
Closed Length (inches) 4.75
Weight (oz.) 6.35
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Stainless steel
Theme None
Latch Type Latch
Is Trainer No