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Midnight Weave Front-Button OTF Knife - Carbon Fiber Black

Price:

36.99


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High Leaf Quick-Deploy OTF Knife - ABS Black
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Midnight Weave Front-Button OTF Blade - Carbon Fiber Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/4972/image_1920?unique=0552e39

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Hot wind, long day, tailgate down outside a West Texas shop. This Texas OTF knife rides flat in your pocket until the front button clicks and that 2.75-inch matte clip point snaps to work. Carbon fiber inlays lock into a sweaty grip. It chews through shrink wrap, cord, and roadside fixes without drama. Single-action, sheath or pocket clip, always where you left it. Quiet, blacked-out, built for folks who like their tools fast, simple, and legal to carry from Panhandle to Gulf.

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When a Texas OTF Knife Earns Its Place in Your Pocket

End of shift at a Permian Basin yard. Dust in the air, heat still coming off the gravel even after dark. You lean into the truck bed, reach past straps and tools, and your hand finds what it always does now: a slim, black OTF knife that vanishes in your pocket until the moment you press that front button.

The Midnight Weave Front-Button OTF Blade - Carbon Fiber Black doesn’t try to impress anyone. It just shows up. Single-action out-the-front, 2.75 inches of matte black clip point steel that handles boxes in the warehouse, cord at the deer lease gate, or a stubborn tie-down on I-35 when the wind kicks up at the wrong time.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Reach For When Space Is Tight and Work Is Real

In tight cab space, on a crowded Houston jobsite, or sliding into the side pocket of a pair of jeans in Lubbock, size matters more than hype. This is a compact Texas OTF knife at 6.875 inches overall, barely over four inches closed. It drops into a pocket and disappears against your phone, or clips inside the waistband under an untucked shirt without printing.

The front-mounted, textured silver button is where your thumb expects it. No hunting for a side switch when you’re working one-handed on a ladder in San Antonio heat or leaning over a cattle panel out near Llano. One push, the blade drives forward; a controlled pull, and it returns home. The single-action mechanism keeps things straightforward: deploy with confidence, reset with intent.

Weighing in at 4.7 ounces, it’s solid enough that you never doubt it’s there, but not so heavy it drags your shorts down when you’re walking from the truck to the dock on the coast. This is the OTF knife Texas customers carry when they want real steel and a real mechanism, without hauling around half a tool chest.

Carbon Fiber and Black Steel Built for Texas Heat, Sweat, and Dust

Out where the caliche dust settles into everything, slick handles don’t last. The carbon fiber weave inlays on this handle aren’t decoration; they’re traction. When your palms are sweaty working an August pour in Dallas or you’re pulling hay twine in a Panhandle wind, those insets give you a locked-in grip without chewing up your hands.

The matte black clip point blade runs lean and purpose-built. A plain edge that sharpens easy and slices clean, with cutouts that lighten the feel and give it that no-nonsense modern look. It’s just as comfortable breaking down a stack of cardboard behind a Hill Country feed store as it is trimming paracord on a camp lantern line under a Big Bend sky.

The handle’s slim, rectangular shape and matte finish don’t flash or snag. Torx hardware keeps everything tight through truck-door slams, toolbox drops, and a season rolling around in the console between receipts and spent brass. A lanyard hole at the rear lets you run cord or a fob if you like extra insurance when you’re fishing along the Guadalupe or working over a stock tank.

Texas OTF Knife Carry: Pocket, Belt, Console, All Covered

Carry culture here isn’t theory; it’s habit. This Texas OTF knife is built around the way Texans actually haul their gear. The pocket clip rides low and flat, ideal for the routine: work jeans in the morning, church clothes on Sunday, gym shorts when you swing by the store at dusk. It doesn’t scream for attention when you’re standing in line at a Buc-ee’s or grabbing a late plate at a small-town diner.

For long days on the road, the deluxe sheath earns its keep. It mounts on a belt, tucks inside a center console, or straps into the side of a range bag. Driving from Amarillo to Austin, you can drop it in the door pocket, sheath and all, and know it’ll be right where your hand falls at the next fuel stop. When you step out to cut a loose strap or slice open pallet wrap at a delivery, the knife is already positioned, blade ready with a single press.

Texas Knife Law and This OTF: What Matters and What Doesn’t

Folks still ask if a switchblade is trouble here. That used to be a fair concern. It isn’t anymore. Texas law changed years back, and automatic knives, including OTFs and front-button switchblades like this one, are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old ban on switchblades is gone.

How This OTF Fits Current Texas Law

Texas now focuses on blade length and location, not the deployment method. With a sub-5.5-inch blade, this knife stays on the safe side of general carry rules for most everyday situations, from walking through a Home Depot in Round Rock to grabbing coffee before a lease run outside of Abilene.

There are still restricted locations in this state where any knife can be an issue — schools, certain government buildings, secure areas, and similar spots. That’s about setting, not the fact that this is an OTF. As long as you’re an adult who can legally possess a knife and you respect posted signs and obvious restricted zones, this front-button automatic is built to stay within the spirit of Texas carry law.

Texas Use Cases Where This OTF Knife Shines

Think about the real moments: cutting feed sack tops at a Hill Country ranch, trimming zip ties on cable runs in a new Plano data center, or opening shrink-wrapped pallets behind a Galveston storefront while the wind comes off the water. One thumb on that front button and the blade is there. No flick, no wrist show, just a clean, direct deployment.

Back at home, it rides easy in shorts while you light the pit, slice butcher paper, or crack open deliveries dropped at the gate. Same tool, same motion, from jobsite to backyard.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF and switchblade designs, are legal for most adults to own and carry. The old statewide ban on switchblades was removed. What you still need to watch are restricted locations — schools, certain government buildings, secure facilities, and similar areas — where knives in general can be prohibited regardless of opening mechanism. Also pay attention to posted signs and local rules. This blade length sits comfortably in the typical everyday-carry range under Texas law, but it’s still on you to use it responsibly.

Is this OTF knife small enough for discreet Texas everyday carry?

It is. At just over four inches closed and weighing 4.7 ounces, this knife disappears in a front pocket under work pants or jeans, rides low on the clip, or tucks into the included sheath on a belt. In a Houston office garage, on a Fort Worth jobsite, or at a San Marcos gas station, it looks like what it is: a compact tool, not a statement piece.

How does this compare to a folder for daily Texas use?

A lot of Texans grew up on traditional folders. This OTF doesn’t replace those; it solves a different problem. When you’re juggling a gate chain, holding a bundle of cable, or bracing a load, the front button and straight-line deployment mean one clean motion from pocket to cut. No two-handed open, no thumb-stud learning curve. If you want fast, predictable access in gloves, in heat, or in tight cab space, this front-button OTF earns its place alongside your old standbys.

First Press, Long Day: Where This Knife Meets You

Picture a late fall evening, north wind pushing through after a week of heat. You’re at the lease gate outside of town, last bit of light hanging over the mesquite. The zip tie on the fresh lock won’t give. Your hand finds that familiar slim handle, thumb settles on the textured front button, and the blade drives forward with a clean, quiet snap.

You cut, stow, and move on. No flourish, no fuss, just a tool that feels like it’s always been there. In the truck console on Highway 90, in your pocket under a snapped pearl-snap, or clipped inside your work pants on a high-rise in Austin, this isn’t a showpiece. It’s the Texas OTF knife for folks who like their gear blacked-out, dependable, and right where they need it when the day runs long.

Blade Length (inches) 2.75
Overall Length (inches) 6.875
Closed Length (inches) 4.125
Weight (oz.) 4.7
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Carbon Fiber
Button Type Front Button
Theme Carbon Fiber
Double/Single Action Single
Pocket Clip Yes
Sheath/Holster Deluxe Sheath