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Rebel Ember Skull Automatic Stiletto Knife - Black Marble

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9.99


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Outlaw Ember Bolster-Release Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Marble

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/2107/image_1920?unique=470fc50

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Neon skull art on a black marble handle, a polished bayonet that snaps out with a bolster press, and a safety that keeps it tamed until you need it. This stiletto automatic rides light in the pocket but shows up loud in the hand. For Texans who like their knives like their stories—sharp, fast, and just a little bit outlaw.

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SB198SKMJ

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
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Outlaw Style Built for Texas Nights

Out past the refinery lights, where the highway runs flat and straight, this is the kind of stiletto automatic knife that lives in a truck console or a back pocket. Long, lean, and unapologetic, it looks like something that’s been slipped across card tables and bar tops for decades—only now it snaps open cleaner, faster, and safer.

The polished bayonet blade jumps from the frame with a quick press to the bolster, not some clumsy top button. That smoking skull laid into the black marble acrylic isn’t decoration; it’s attitude. This is a knife for the Texan who grew up on outlaw records, late-night diner coffee, and the kind of backroad trouble that never makes the paper.

Texas Automatic Knife Culture, No Apologies

There was a time you had to think twice about carrying an automatic knife in this state. Those days are gone. Texas law now treats an automatic like this stiletto the way it should—as a tool, not a crime. So a bolster-release automatic knife like this can ride with you from Amarillo feed lots to South Congress parking garages without feeling like contraband.

The stiletto profile is classic: 8.875 inches overall, just under 4 inches of polished bayonet-style blade with a central fuller. It sits slim in the pocket, doesn’t print loud under jeans, and draws straight into the hand. That pocket clip keeps it pinned along the seam, easy to reach when you’re leaning into a tailgate, hauling feed, or cutting a stubborn piece of hose behind the barn.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Automatic Alternative

Folks who search for an OTF knife in Texas usually want one thing: speed they can trust when they’re working one-handed. This stiletto automatic knife answers that same need from another angle. Instead of a blade shooting out the front, you get a side-folding bayonet that opens with a bolster press—fast, clean, and controlled.

In real Texas carry, the difference matters less than it sounds. Whether you’re parked off a caliche lease road cutting open sacks, or in a San Antonio warehouse breaking down boxes, what you want is one-handed access and a blade you can close without wrestling it. This automatic gives you that: press the bolster, feel the spring drive the blade into lockup, then fold it back into the black marble scales when you’re done.

When an Automatic Beats an OTF in Texas

There are places in Texas where dust and grit get into everything—West Texas wind, Panhandle feed yards, Hill Country caliche. An OTF knife can pack debris inside the track. This automatic stiletto keeps that polished steel blade tight against the liners until you need it. Less grit in the works, less time cleaning, more time cutting hay string, tape, and nylon straps.

Smoking Skull Detail for the Texas Counterculture

The handle tells the story before you ever thumb the safety. A green smoking skull pours out tendrils of color, drifting over a black and green marble-like acrylic. Near the butt, the leaf graphic nods to the smoker’s world without turning the knife into a toy. It looks like something you’d see passed across a back table at a Deep Ellum bar or resting next to a glass ashtray on a back porch in East Austin.

Polished bolsters frame that artwork, catching light from a neon sign or a dash cluster on a late run down I-35. At 5 inches closed and 4.52 ounces, it sits with some presence in the hand—no cheap rattle, no hollow feel. The steel blade holds its own against cardboard, plastic banding, and the stray length of rubber fuel line that always seems to need trimming.

Texas Use Cases: From Tailgate to Back Table

Picture it clipped inside your pocket at a Friday night show in Houston. Parking lot’s hot, air’s thick, and somebody needs a cable tie cut or a strap trimmed. The bolster clicks, the blade snaps, and the job’s done before anyone finishes their sentence. Same knife, next morning, sits in the console cupholder as you roll out to the lease, opening feed bags or cutting line on a snagged jug.

Understanding Texas Knife Laws for Automatics

Texas knife laws have shifted in favor of the person who actually uses a blade. Automatic knives—including stiletto automatics like this—are legal to own and carry for most adults, statewide. The main line in the sand is blade length when you walk into certain places.

This stiletto automatic comes in under 4 inches of blade, which keeps it out of the “location-restricted knife” category under Texas law. That matters when you’re carrying from the truck to a friend’s house downtown, stopping at a gas station near a school zone, or heading into a bar that posts generic weapon warnings. You’re still responsible for knowing posted policies, but this size keeps you away from the obvious red flags.

The integrated safety slide near the bolster lets you lock the button down before you clip it in your pocket or set it in your truck’s door pocket. In Texas, that’s more than a convenience—it’s peace of mind if you’re climbing into a lifted rig, dropping into a low bucket seat, or bending to pull gear from the bed. No accidental deployments, no surprises.

Are Automatic Knives Legal Like an OTF Knife in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives are all legal to own and carry for most adults, as long as you respect blade-length limits in certain protected locations. This automatic stiletto sits under those limits, which makes it a smart choice for everyday carry across most of the state. When in doubt, check the latest Texas statutes or talk to a local dealer who keeps up with changes.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic and OTF-Style Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed the old switchblade and OTF bans. Today, an OTF knife in Texas is treated like any other knife, with the key restriction being blade length in certain sensitive locations such as schools, some government buildings, and similar protected areas. This stiletto automatic, with its sub-4-inch blade, fits comfortably under those limits, making it a practical everyday option for most Texans.

Will this stiletto automatic hold up to real Texas use?

It’s built for more than show. The polished steel bayonet blade is stout enough for day-to-day cutting—feed bags in the Panhandle, shipping straps at a Houston dock, tape and cord in a Dallas warehouse. The acrylic scales over metal liners give it structure, while the bolsters and guards keep your hand in place when sweat, dust, or oil get involved.

Why pick this automatic over a true OTF knife in Texas?

If you like the drama of an OTF knife but want simple mechanics and easier cleaning, this automatic is a smart middle ground. You still get fast, one-handed deployment with a press of the bolster, but the blade folds into the handle instead of riding through an internal track. In Texas dust, ranch grit, and shop debris, that can mean fewer jams and less maintenance while still scratching that switchblade itch.

Texas Moments This Knife Was Made For

End of a long day. The sky over the lot is turning the same deep color as the acrylic under that smoking skull. You’re leaned against a tailgate outside a small-town bar, cutting the plastic off a bundle of firewood someone picked up at the station. The blade flashes once in the fading light, then disappears back into black marble with a click.

Tomorrow it’ll ride clipped inside your jeans while you crawl under a fence line east of San Angelo or step out of a rideshare off West Sixth. Same knife, same quick action, same easy carry. For Texans who appreciate an OTF knife but want outlaw character in a classic stiletto frame, this automatic feels right at home.

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