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Frontier Contrast Full-Tang Hunting Knife - White Bone & Rosewood

Price:

23.99


Glacier Vein Full-Tang Hunting Knife - Blue & White Bone
Glacier Vein Full-Tang Hunting Knife - Blue & White Bone
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Harvest Bone Field-Pro Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bovine
Harvest Bone Field-Pro Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - White & Yellow Bovine
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Range-Line Contrast Full-Tang Hunting Knife - White Bone & Rosewood

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/5990/image_1920?unique=014dd0c

4 sold in last 24 hours

South of Abilene or north of Amarillo, this full‑tang hunting knife feels like it grew into your hand. The 7-inch stainless drop point holds steady through hog, whitetail, or camp work, while the white bone and rosewood handle locks into a bare or gloved palm. At 12 inches overall with a leather belt sheath, it rides clean along a truck seat or over brush pants. Quiet, dependable, and built to be the knife that actually gets used.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
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  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
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Range-Line Contrast: A Full-Tang Hunting Knife Built for Real Texas Ground

Out past the last mailbox, where the asphalt turns to caliche and mesquite, a hunting knife isn’t an accessory. It’s part of the kit. This full-tang fixed blade was built for that stretch of Texas, where you field dress a whitetail at last light, then cut feed sacks back at the barn with the same blade.

The polished 7-inch stainless drop point carries enough belly for clean skinning on a Hill Country buck, but the spine stays straight and honest for camp chores. White bone and rosewood handle scales wrap the tang in a grip that feels like a tool handed down, not pulled from a blister pack. It’s the knife that sits on the dash all season, then finds its way onto the belt when it’s time to work.

Why This Full-Tang Hunting Knife Belongs on a Texas Belt

Texas hunting seasons don’t care if you’re tired, cold, or working by headlamp. A 12-inch overall, full-tang hunting knife with a 7-inch blade gives you reach and control when you’re quartering a hog in thick brush or breaking down a deer hanging from a live oak. The exposed tang running the length of the handle tells you it’s not going to quit when the work gets rough.

That white bovine bone doesn’t just look clean against the darker rosewood—it gives your fingers a defined purchase when blood, sweat, or rain slick the handle. The rosewood section, pinned with a mosaic center, warms quickly in your palm, even on a cold Panhandle morning. You feel where the guard ends and the work begins, so your hand stays where it should when you’re pushing through hide or cartilage.

Texas OTF Knife Buyers and the Fixed Blade They Still Trust

Plenty of folks across the state now carry an OTF knife Texas style—clipped inside the pocket for daily use and quick cuts. But when the truck noses off the ranch road and you’re stepping into waist-high grass, a full-tang hunting knife like this still rides on the belt. The OTF handles the gates and boxes; this fixed blade handles the animals and wood.

Texas buyers looking for a Texas OTF knife often want one dependable fixed companion to live in the truck, ride the belt in season, and handle the heavy work that makes any automatic stay sharp longer. That’s where this knife fits: not instead of the OTF, but beside it. One-handed action in town, full-tang strength in the pasture.

Field Performance from South Texas Brush to Panhandle Fence Lines

Texas terrain changes fast—live oak and prickly pear giving way to coastal grass or red-dirt breaks. A hunting knife that stays useful across all of it can’t be overly specialized. The drop point here is straightforward and honest: enough curve for clean, sweeping cuts along a rib cage, enough point to start a careful seam along a hog’s hide without blowing through meat.

Stainless steel earns its keep in this state. From the humidity rolling off the Gulf to a week of ice north of Wichita Falls, a blade that shrugs off sweat, blood, and a forgotten night in a damp sheath is more valuable than any exotic alloy on paper. Wipe it down, strop it when you’re back at the house, and it’s ready for the next weekend’s hunt.

The leather sheath rides close along a belt, stitching tight enough that it doesn’t sag when you’re climbing into a blind or swinging a leg over a fence. Snap the retention strap, and the knife stays put when you’re stepping over washouts or bouncing along in the passenger seat of a ranch truck headed to the back pasture.

Texas Knife Law, Fixed Blades, and Where This Knife Fits

Questions about Texas knife laws usually land on the counter not long after someone asks about a Texas OTF knife. The good news: under current Texas law, a fixed blade hunting knife like this, even over 5.5 inches, is legal to own and—outside certain restricted locations—legal to carry. The state stopped treating longer blades as contraband for everyday Texans years ago.

There are still places where any long blade stays in the truck: schools, some government buildings, secured areas with posted rules. This knife is meant for pastures, leases, camps, and ranch work, not courthouse hallways or Friday night games. Carried on the belt to and from the field, it sits well inside what most Texas game wardens expect to see during season.

What many buyers do now is simple: they buy OTF knife Texas options for pocket carry in town and use a full-tang hunting knife like this for land, lease, and livestock. Each tool has a lane. Know where the law draws its few hard lines, and you’re fine on both counts.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Hunting Knives and Texas OTF Knife Carry

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, OTF knives and other automatics are legal to own and carry, just like this fixed blade hunting knife. The main concern now isn’t the opening mechanism—it’s location. Certain protected places still restrict blades over 5.5 inches and sometimes any knife at all. Outside of those areas, Texans routinely carry an automatic in the pocket and a hunting knife on the belt without issue. If you’re unsure about a specific building or event, check posted signs or local policy.

How does this full-tang hunting knife pair with a Texas OTF knife in the field?

Most Texas hunters run two blades. The Texas OTF knife handles quick tasks: cutting tape off feed, trimming cord, opening bags in the bed of the truck. When an animal is on the ground or camp chores pile up, this 7-inch full tang comes out. The OTF stays sharp and handy for fine work, while the hunting knife shoulders the heavy cuts—rib cages, joints, kindling, and anything that asks for leverage and length.

Should I buy an OTF knife Texas style first, or start with a full-tang fixed blade?

It depends where you spend your time. If most of your week is in town or on job sites, starting with a pocketable OTF knife Texas legal carry makes sense, then adding a field knife like this for weekends and deer season. If your life leans more toward pasture, lease roads, and blinds, a solid full-tang hunting knife earns its place first, with a Texas OTF knife added later for everyday pocket carry. The two don’t compete; they cover different parts of the same life.

A Knife That Makes Sense on Texas Ground

Picture an evening on a small place outside San Saba. The truck’s backed up to the skinning rack, bed light throwing a hard edge across the gravel. This hunting knife is already on your belt, leather sheath creased from years, not months. You ease the drop point in behind the shoulder, let the belly of the blade follow the line you’ve cut a hundred times before.

The white bone and rosewood sit firm in your hand, even with gloves pushed back and the November air cutting across your fingers. In the cab, your OTF knife waits in the console for tomorrow’s run into town. Out here, this full-tang fixed blade is the one that matters. Steel, bone, wood, leather—nothing extra. Just a knife that belongs exactly where you’re standing.

Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 12
Weight (oz.) 14
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Drop Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Bovine Bone & Rosewood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full
Pommel/Butt Cap Exposed tang
Carry Method Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather