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Marble Mirage Push-Button Stiletto Switchblade - Rainbow Steel

Price:

13.99


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Neon Crossroads Push-Button Stiletto Knife - Rainbow Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2102/image_1920?unique=705b737

6 sold in last 24 hours

You step out of the truck into a humid Houston night, parking lot lights bouncing off chrome and wet pavement. The Neon Crossroads stiletto sits flat in your pocket until you need it—one clean push and that 3.875-inch rainbow bayonet snaps to attention. Marble-look handle, top safety, pocket clip. Flashy enough for Sixth Street, dependable enough for glovebox duty.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

SB198RWP

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Where a Marble Rainbow Stiletto Actually Belongs

Think of a Friday night outside a music venue off Red River in Austin. Parking lot’s full, air’s thick, somebody’s trying to cut a stubborn nylon tie off a speaker case in the dark. Pocket flashlights come out, teeth get used, somebody mutters they should’ve brought a knife. One person doesn’t say a word. They thumb the safety, press the button, and a slim rainbow blade clicks open like it’s been waiting all week. That’s the job of this push-button stiletto in Texas—it’s the slick, showy blade that still earns its keep.

OTF Knife Texas Buyers Also Look at This Automatic Stiletto

If you’re the kind of buyer searching for an OTF knife Texas side, you’re usually looking for three things: fast, one-handed, and pocketable. This automatic stiletto hits the same notes a Texas OTF knife buyer cares about, just with a side-opening action instead of straight out-the-front. Closed at about five inches and weighing a hair over four and a half ounces, it rides easy in jeans or slipped into the inside pocket of a denim jacket while you bounce between bars in Deep Ellum or stroll the River Walk.

The blade is a 3.875-inch bayonet profile—long, narrow, and pointed—done in a polished rainbow finish that throws color under station lights and truck LEDs. When you press that side button, the blade doesn’t crawl out; it snaps, clean and audible, the way Texans expect an automatic to behave. For anyone shopping a Texas OTF knife and open to a side-auto, this fills the same carry role with more personality than a plain black tactical piece.

Texas OTF Knife Shoppers, Meet a Different Kind of Flash

Most folks hunting "best OTF knife in Texas" think black handles, stonewashed blades, and tactical marketing. This knife doesn’t pretend to be that. It’s slim, styled like a classic Italian stiletto with modern touches: white marble acrylic scales pinned to polished rainbow bolsters and hardware, a single-edge bayonet blade built more for piercing and clean slicing than prying or batoning mesquite.

This is the blade that fits the Texas city night—Fort Worth stockyards crowds, San Antonio river bars, Galveston boardwalk lights coming off the water. The marble-look handle stays smooth and cool in hand. The push-button sits right where your thumb naturally lands, with a top-mounted safety slide to keep it from firing in a pocket or purse as you climb in and out of a lifted truck.

How It Carries and Cuts in Real Texas Life

In the real world, a Texas OTF knife or an automatic like this spends most of its time closed. It lives clipped to the edge of your pocket while you drive I-35, toss hay in the morning, or wait out a storm line in a Buc-ee’s parking lot. This stiletto’s pocket clip keeps it high and accessible, not buried where you’re fishing for it under keys and receipts.

At 8.875 inches overall when open, it has the reach to get past fat feed bags, banding, blister packs, or that knotted paracord someone swore they’d "just undo." The plain edge bites into plastic, cardboard, or tape without snaggy serrations. It’s not your mesquite-chopping ranch knife, but it’ll cut nylon, open packages, slice zip-ties, or trim loose strap ends as clean as you’d want standing next to your truck.

Urban Texas Nights, Quick-Draw Reality

On a Houston side street or a late Dallas light rail stop, the value of this knife is simple: you can get it open fast with one hand while the other is holding a box, leash, or rail. Push-button deployment means no fumbling with thumb studs or flippers when your grip’s sweaty from Gulf humidity. You can feel and hear it lock up—no question whether it’s ready.

Glovebox and Console Duty Across the State

Plenty of Texans don’t want to pocket-carry all the time. This knife rides well in a center console between a registration envelope and a flashlight, or in a door pocket on a ranch truck running between gates. The bright rainbow finish means when you pop the console in low light, you see steel, not just shadow.

Texas Knife Law Confidence: Switchblade and Auto Reality

A lot of buyers still ask the same thing when they see a push-button blade: "Are switchblades legal here?" In this state, the answer is yes—automatic knives and switchblades are legal to own and carry for most adults. Texas removed the old switchblade restrictions years back, and modern Texas knife laws focus more on blade length and location than on automatic versus manual.

This stiletto sits in the “small” category for state law—under the five-and-a-half-inch cutoff that defines what you can generally carry in most public places. That makes it viable for everyday pocket carry around town, sliding into your jeans before you head to work, a show, or a game. As always, some locations—schools, courthouses, certain venues—have their own rules, so any serious Texas knife carrier still checks posted signs and local policies. But from a state standpoint, a slim automatic like this is no longer a back-room item; it’s part of normal Texas knife culture.

Are OTF Knives Legal to Carry in Texas?

Yes. For years now, state law has allowed Texans to own and carry OTF knives, switchblades, and other automatics. The big question isn’t whether the mechanism is legal; it’s whether the blade length fits within the under 5.5-inch "everyday" range for most public carry. This rainbow stiletto’s sub-4-inch blade fits well inside that limit, putting it in the same legal lane as most common pocket knives around the state.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas law no longer singles out OTF or switchblade-style knives as prohibited. What matters is the blade length and where you take it. Knives with blades under 5.5 inches are widely legal to carry for adults in everyday places across the state, while longer blades fall into a different category with more location limits. So if you’ve heard old stories about automatics being illegal here, that’s history, not current law.

Does this automatic stiletto work as an alternative to a Texas OTF knife?

For most Texas buyers, yes. If what you want from a Texas OTF knife is fast, one-handed deployment and a slim pocket footprint, this side-opening automatic gives you that. The push-button is crisp, the top safety lets you carry with confidence in jeans or a jacket, and the profile is narrow enough that it doesn’t print loud in lighter summer clothes from Lubbock to Brownsville.

Is this more showpiece than work knife for Texas carry?

It walks the line. The rainbow blade and marble handle are built to draw the eye—this will get comments at a tailgate or on a jobsite. But under the flash you still have a steel bayonet blade that opens boxes, cuts wraps, and handles daily cutting tasks. If you want one hard-use ranch knife, you’ll pick something plainer. If you want a reliable automatic that earns its keep and still looks like it belongs under city lights, this fits.

Why It Belongs in a Texas Pocket

Picture a humid summer night in San Antonio. You’re leaning against a warm hood, river air drifting up, someone handing you a bundle of cables to cut down before last call. You reach past your keys, thumb the safety off without looking, and feel that button under your finger. The blade snaps out, catches the neon and the bridge lights, and for a second it’s all color and steel. Then it’s just doing its job—clean cuts, quick close, back in your pocket.

That’s what this automatic stiletto offers here: not a fantasy knife, not a dusty display piece, but a sharp, fast, good-looking tool that makes sense in the real Texas nights you actually live.

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