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Lone Star Oath Heavyweight Brass Knuckles - Black Metal

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21.99


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Oathbound Heritage Texas Brass Knuckles - Black Metal

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1869/image_1920?unique=7e69c65

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On a West Texas shelf, beside a folded flag and a worn Stetson, this heavyweight Texas brass knuckle sits like a promise kept. Ten ounces of black metal, cut clean with “LAND OF THE FREE – TEXAS – HOME OF THE BRAVE,” it feels as solid as the ranch caliche under your boots. Built to display, meant to be handed down, it anchors a room the way an old family rifle does—quiet, heavy, and sure of where it stands.

21.99 21.99 USD 21.99

PW300TXBR

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Texas Brass Knuckles That Feel Like They Belong on Your Mantel

Some pieces don’t need an explanation. Set this heavyweight brass knuckle on a mesquite shelf above a stone fireplace, and it just makes sense. Black metal, ten ounces of solid heft, with one word cut bold across the palm bar: TEXAS. Above and below it, the promise is spelled out straight—“LAND OF THE FREE – HOME OF THE BRAVE.” It looks like something that’s always been there, even when it’s brand new.

Why This Oathbound Heritage Texas Brass Knuckle Fits Real Texas Life

In a Panhandle gun room, in a Hill Country shop, or on a counter in a small-town feed store, certain things catch the eye and slow a man down. This Texas brass knuckle is one of them. At about four and a half inches long and nearly three inches tall, it fills a palm the way a good hammer does: no rattle, no doubt. The matte black finish keeps the shine down, letting the light-colored engraving do the talking.

Those rounded, beveled finger holes aren’t just for show. Slip your hand through and you feel the weight settle across your knuckles, half an inch thick from front to back. It’s a reminder of older days when hard metal and a firm grip settled more than a few arguments outside Texas roadhouses and along dry, dusty main streets.

On a glass display or against pine paneling, the contrast hits first—the dark metal, the bold TEXAS, the tight block lettering framing it. Buyers in Amarillo, Houston, and every stop between don’t need a sales pitch. They pick it up, feel the weight, read the words, and know if it belongs in their home, shop, or office.

Display-Ready Texas Pride With Knuckle Duster Roots

There’s a reason some collectors look past flags and wall art and go straight to objects they can actually hold. This brass knuckle comes out of that mindset. It’s a throwback to knuckle duster silhouettes carried in coat pockets and saddle bags, reshaped for the shelf instead of the street. Ten ounces of metal means it doesn’t feel cheap. It sits flat on its base, steady on a counter, ready to be picked up and passed around.

The blackout finish gives it a low-profile look, more working-gear than souvenir. No fake patina, no gimmicks—just clean, solid metal with crisp lettering that doesn’t blur or fade into the background. The TEXAS mark is the first thing you see across a room, big enough to read in a dim bar corner or a back office lit by a single fluorescent tube.

For retailers, it earns its front-row spot in a case. One of these, centered between blades and belt buckles, acts like a magnet—customers will tap the glass, ask to hold it, then start talking about where they grew up, what they carried, and who first taught them what knuckles like this were for. That story value is what keeps it from being just another prop.

Texas Law, Brass Knuckles, and Where This Piece Fits

Anyone buying a Texas brass knuckle today has heard some version of the old law: knuckles used to be flat-out banned. That was true. For years, carrying brass knuckles here could land you in real trouble, same as certain blades and other impact weapons. Then the law changed. In 2019, Texas removed brass knuckles from the prohibited weapons list, bringing the rules more in line with how people actually live and carry in this state.

Now, an adult can legally own and carry brass knuckles in Texas, with the same common-sense limits that apply to any weapon: they can’t be used to threaten, harm, or break the law. That’s where this particular piece settles into its lane. With its bold engraving and heavy build, it brings more value as a display collectible and symbol of state pride than as something slipped into a pocket on a Friday night in Deep Ellum.

Understanding Texas Brass Knuckle Laws in Plain Terms

If you’re stocking or buying this as a retailer in Lubbock or Corpus, you’re not skirting the edges of the code. Current Texas law allows sale, purchase, and carry of brass knuckles, but every buyer still has to use common sense. This is an impact-style tool at its core. It should be treated the way you treat a handgun in a truck console or a fighting knife on a ranch belt—with respect and restraint.

For most folks, it never leaves the house. It anchors a display next to Texas-themed OTF knives, challenge coins, or old badges. It’s something a customer will talk about while you walk them through other gear that fits legal everyday carry better, especially in urban counties where law enforcement attention is higher and patience is shorter.

How Texas Collectors Actually Use This Heavyweight Knuckle

A rancher outside Kerrville might set it on a gun safe beside a leather-wrapped flask. A Houston bar owner drops it behind the counter, where only regulars get to see the full engraving. A Midland oil hand brings it out on poker night, sets it in the center of the table like a centerpiece. This is how Texas brass knuckles show up today—not as a main tool, but as a statement piece with history baked in.

From Shop Display to Conversation Starter

In a San Antonio knife shop, this black metal knuckle duster works as icebreaker. A customer looking over Texas OTF knives spots the TEXAS lettering, asks to feel the weight, and suddenly you’re not just talking steel types and blade grinds—you’re talking about old street laws, how the code changed, and why the state relaxed on items like this. That story is half the reason pieces like this sell.

Once it leaves the case, it tends to live where stories do best: on desks, mantels, and back bars. It doesn’t beg for attention. It just sits heavy and quiet until someone notices the engraving and asks, “Where’d you get that?”

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Texas Brass Knuckles

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, including OTF knives and traditional switchblades, are legal to own and carry for adults. The state removed switchblade bans several years back, and later relaxed many knife length restrictions. The same general rule applies as with firearms and impact tools: use them lawfully, don’t threaten or brandish, and know that certain locations—like schools or secured government buildings—can have their own restrictions regardless of what the state allows.

Can I legally own and display these Texas brass knuckles at home?

Yes. In Texas today, you can lawfully buy, own, and display brass knuckles like this black metal Texas model in your home, office, or shop. Many Texans treat them as part of a broader collection alongside OTF knives, pistols, and historic pieces. As long as you’re not using them to commit a crime or threaten anyone, simple possession and display are legal under current state law.

Should I carry this Texas brass knuckle or keep it as a collectible?

Most seasoned Texas buyers keep a piece like this as a collectible. It’s heavy, eye-catching, and engraved with a message that reads more like a banner than a concealed tool. For everyday self-defense needs, Texas OTF knives, fixed blades, and handguns typically make more practical sense, with clear holsters, clips, and carry setups. This brass knuckle shines best where people can see it, hold it, and talk about it.

A Texas Moment With Metal That Matches Your Word

Picture a quiet evening outside a small house on the edge of town, porch light throwing a soft circle over a weathered table. You set this black metal brass knuckle down beside a half-drunk cup of coffee and a folder full of old deeds. The engraving catches the light just enough to read: land of the free, home of the brave, with TEXAS standing firm between them. It doesn’t shout. It doesn’t need to.

In a state where a man’s word still matters more than his talk, this is the kind of piece that fits right in—solid, simple, and unapologetic about where it comes from and what it stands for.

Weight (oz.) 10
Theme Texas
Length (inches) 4.5
Width (inches) 2.75
Thickness (inches) 0.5
Material Metal
Color Black