Skip to Content
Iridescent Twister Performance Butterfly Knife - Rainbow Steel

Price:

19.99


Twister Flair Butterfly Knife - Gold Inlay Steel
Twister Flair Butterfly Knife - Gold Inlay Steel
19.99 19.99
Gilded Arc Performance Butterfly Knife - Gold
Gilded Arc Performance Butterfly Knife - Gold
15.99 15.99

Neon Twister Butterfly Knife - Rainbow Steel

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/8865/image_1920?unique=2a0999f

9 sold in last 24 hours

Warm air, parking lot lights, nothing urgent on the schedule. That’s when the Neon Twister Butterfly Knife goes to work. All-steel construction gives it real weight, while the satin clip point blade handles boxes, cord, and tape without complaint. The rainbow handles catch every bit of light as you flip. It rides easy in a pocket, feels solid in the hand, and fits the kind of Texan who likes a little flash backed by steel.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

BFBK1RW

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Latch Type
  • Is Trainer

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Neon Twister Butterfly Knife in Texas Hands

Hot evening, truck cooling down in a driveway outside of Lubbock. One foot on the bumper, one hand on the Neon Twister Butterfly Knife, running a simple opening pattern while you watch the sky change. The satin blade stays quiet and silver. The rainbow steel handles throw color like gas on water. Nothing fancy. Just a balisong that feels right in the hand and gives you something solid to work with when it’s time to cut.

This isn’t a wall piece. At nine inches open with a 3.5-inch clip point blade, it’s built to ride in a pocket, glove box, or center console and actually see use. The Twister name comes through the handles: twisted grooves cut into full steel, filled with that iridescent finish that looks like heat shimmering over a long Texas highway.

How a Butterfly Knife Fits Texas Carry Culture

Across the state—from Dallas high-rises to small towns strung along Highway 90—people carry knives for the same quiet reasons: open a package, cut baling twine, trim a loose strap, pass something sharp and reliable to a friend who needs it. A butterfly knife like the Neon Twister adds motion to that habit. The flip becomes part of the ritual before the cut.

Closed, this butterfly knife sits just over five inches. That length lets it drop into front pockets of jeans or work pants without fighting you when you sit in a truck or slide into a bar stool. At 4.8 ounces, it has enough weight to feel present but not like a brick in your pocket through a long day in Houston humidity or a late night in Austin.

Texas Moments Made for a Butterfly Knife

Think about long waits: kids’ baseball practice in San Antonio, parked under weak shade; night security shifts in Midland; slow cook-offs where there’s more sitting than talking. A butterfly knife gives your hands something to do that isn’t a phone. The Neon Twister’s smooth pivots and steel handle construction let you run basic openings and closings over and over without feeling loose or rattly.

Build Details Texas Buyers Notice

A Texan who buys a butterfly knife doesn’t just want flash. They want to know how it’s put together. The Neon Twister Butterfly Knife runs an all-steel frame, blade, and hardware. That means it shrugs off pocket lint, truck-console grit, and the occasional drop onto concrete when you miss a catch.

The 3.5-inch clip point blade sits in a satin finish, plain edge, ready for normal cutting work: breaking down cardboard from an oilfield shipment, slicing nylon strapping off feed, or opening stacked deliveries at a suburban doorstep in Plano. The edge length is long enough to be useful without turning the knife into a chore to carry.

The handles carry a glossy, twisted-groove pattern with rainbow inlays. Those grooves aren’t just for show. They give your fingers channels to find during flips, adding control when your hands are dry, slick with sweat, or picking the knife up out of a dusty truck bed. The bite-handle latch closes the knife solid when you’re done, so it won’t work itself open rolling around in a center console on caliche roads outside Kerrville.

Steel and Weight for Real Use

At just under five ounces, this butterfly knife lands in that sweet spot where the blade tracks predictably through tricks but the weight doesn’t pull at light shorts or thin work pants. That matters in Texas heat, where most of the year you’re not layering up—you’re looking for gear that disappears until needed.

What Texas Knife Laws Mean for a Butterfly Knife

Texas knife laws changed enough in the past decade that it’s worth laying them out plainly. Under current law, a butterfly knife is treated like any other folding knife. It is not singled out the way it once was in some states, and it is not treated as a prohibited weapon. For most adult Texans, this means owning and carrying a balisong like the Neon Twister is legal in everyday life.

The real legal divider now is blade length, not the mechanism. Texas law uses the term “location-restricted knife” for blades over 5.5 inches. With a 3.5-inch blade, this butterfly knife sits under that mark, which gives you far more freedom about where you carry it day to day. There are still sensitive locations—schools, certain government buildings, secure areas—where knives of any sort can run into restrictions, so common sense and local rules still apply.

Are Butterfly Knives Treated Like Switchblades Here?

No. In Texas, the old prohibition on switchblades and automatic knives has been rolled back. Automatics, OTFs, and butterfly knives all fall into the broader knife category now. As long as you respect the 5.5-inch blade threshold and stay aware of posted rules in certain locations, a balisong like the Neon Twister fits into normal Texas carry without drama.

Why This Butterfly Knife Works for Texas Buyers

Plenty of butterfly knives lean too light and flimsy, built only for show. Others run so big or tactical that they don’t sit right in a pocket during a summer in Corpus or on a job site in Fort Worth. The Neon Twister hits a middle line: full-steel durability, moderate size, enough color to feel like yours, and a blade that’s ready to open feed bags or shipping tape without being babied.

In a state where knives are still tools first, the trick element is a bonus. You get the flipping motion when you want it—under stadium lights waiting for kickoff in College Station, on a porch in Amarillo after the wind finally dies down—but you also get a cutting tool that doesn’t blink when the work shows up.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Butterfly Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas law no longer bans switchblades or OTF knives. They’re treated like other knives, with the key limit being blade length. Once a blade passes 5.5 inches, it becomes a “location-restricted knife,” which can’t be carried in certain places like schools or some government buildings. The same basic rule of thumb that keeps most Texans safe with an OTF applies to butterfly knives like the Neon Twister: stay under 5.5 inches, pay attention to posted rules, and you’re on solid ground.

Is the Neon Twister Butterfly Knife good for everyday carry in Texas?

For most Texans, yes. The closed length of just over five inches and 4.8-ounce weight make it easy to pocket-carry in jeans or work pants. The 3.5-inch blade stays under the legal threshold that triggers location limits, while still giving you useful edge for daily jobs—from Amazon boxes on a Dallas doorstep to rope and plastic tie-downs at a Hill Country campsite. If your day involves a lot of on-and-off sitting in trucks, offices, or barstools, the size works with you instead of against you.

How do I decide between a butterfly knife and an OTF in Texas?

It comes down to how you like to carry and use your knife. An OTF gives you instant, one-handed deployment at the push of a switch—good for work gloves and quick utility cuts on job sites from El Paso to Beaumont. A butterfly knife like the Neon Twister brings a more deliberate, fidget-friendly motion. If you want a knife that doubles as a skill toy for long waits and slow evenings, the balisong feels right. If you need fast, one-handed action under pressure, an OTF might be the better fit. Both live comfortably in modern Texas knife law when the blade length is reasonable.

First Use: A Familiar Texas Scene

Picture a warm night at a small-town field off Highway 6. Kids still chasing the ball under the lights, parents leaning against chain-link. You pull the Neon Twister Butterfly Knife from your pocket, feel the steel weight, and run a clean open before cutting the stubborn tape on a cooler. The blade slides back into its handles, the latch clicks, and it disappears again. No fanfare. Just a knife that fits the place, the pace, and the way Texans still like steel in their hands when there’s something that needs doing.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.125
Weight (oz.) 4.8
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Steel
Theme Iridescent
Latch Type Bite handle latch
Is Trainer No