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Godfather Heritage Automatic Stiletto Knife - White Marble

Price:

21.99


Godfather Heritage Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Red Wood
Godfather Heritage Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Red Wood
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Riverwalk Heritage Automatic Stiletto Knife - White Marble

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1842/image_1920?unique=d85854c

15 sold in last 24 hours

You’re walking back to the truck after a late dinner on the Riverwalk, jacket light, pockets clean. This automatic stiletto rides slim in the inside pocket, white marble catching just a hint of light when you press the button and the 3.125-inch spear point snaps out. Safety slide keeps it tamed, old-world style keeps it sharp. Not a ranch beater—this is the knife you bring when the boots are polished and the evening runs long.

21.99 21.99 USD 21.99

GF8155WT

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Dress Steel for Texas Nights

The sun’s down over the river, heat finally bleeding off the stone. You’re walking a San Antonio sidewalk, boots quiet, shirt sleeves rolled. This isn’t the evening for a beat-up work blade riding loose in a pocket. This is the kind of night when a slim automatic stiletto with a white marble handle makes sense every time your hand brushes past it.

The Riverwalk Heritage Automatic Stiletto Knife is built for those Texas hours after the work is done. At 5 inches closed and 8.75 inches open, it carries long and lean without bulking up a dress shirt, blazer, or inside boot top. One press of the button and that 3.125-inch spear point snaps into place with the clean, confident sound you only get from a well-tuned automatic.

Why This Automatic Stiletto Belongs in Texas Carry Culture

There’s no shortage of working knives in this state. This isn’t that. This is the piece that comes out when you’re in a Fort Worth steakhouse parking lot trimming a loose thread off a sport coat, or cracking open a letter on a downtown Austin office desk. The polished silver blade and bolsters keep it sharp and formal; the white marble-style handle feels right next to a good watch and a pressed shirt.

The automatic action is fast, but not showy. The round button sits proud on the handle where your thumb naturally lands, and the blade drives out in a straight, narrow line—more gentleman’s tool than barroom prop. The sliding safety tames it when you’re done, so it stays shut in a pocket as you cross a crowded bar or ride an elevator up a Houston high-rise.

Texas OTF Knife Culture, Automatic Tradition, and Where This Fits

A lot of Texans reach for an OTF knife when they want one-handed speed. This automatic stiletto walks the same line of quick deployment, but with a different heritage. Instead of a blade firing straight out the front, this one swings open along a classic Italian stiletto arc, the spear point locking out with a familiar click that’s been around since switchblades first rode in boot tops and jacket linings.

In a truck console rolling I-35 or tucked into a jacket on the Riverwalk, this isn’t your everyday cardboard breaker. It’s the blade you bring along when the hat’s clean and the plans run past midnight. It sits flat against a wallet or phone, no pocket clip to flash or catch. When you need it, thumb hits the button, the spear point is there, and the job—opening a package, cutting cord, cleaning up a tag end—is done in a second.

Houston High-Rise, San Antonio Side Street, Same Purpose

In a downtown Houston garage, it lives quiet in a glovebox or center console, ready to slice strapping off a case of print materials before a client meeting. In San Antonio, it rides inside a light jacket on a crowded night along the river, coming out only when you need a sharp edge, then disappearing again just as quick.

Automatic Stiletto Details That Matter in Texas Use

The blade is a narrow, polished steel spear point, long enough at 3.125 inches to do real cutting, short enough to disappear when folded. The high-polish finish shrugs off tape gunk and wipes clean on a handkerchief or shirt tail. The plain edge bites into envelope seams, banding, and plastic packaging without tearing.

The handle is where the knife earns its heritage name. White marble-style scales with a pearlescent swirl catch light like stone in an old Hill Country courthouse. Polished bolsters frame that white, giving the knife a balanced, symmetrical look from tip to pommel. Brass-colored pins hold everything together the old way—simple, visible, honest.

There’s no pocket clip. That’s intentional. This knife is meant to disappear until it’s needed. It rides deep in a pocket, inside a boot shaft, or flat in a console tray. The exposed pommel gives you a spot for a lanyard if you want a little extra insurance pulling it from a coat or vest.

The Feel of the Action

Press the button and the blade doesn’t hesitate. It snaps out with authority but not violence—enough force to lock, not so much you lose control. Slide the safety up and it stays put; drop the safety and the knife is live and ready. It’s the kind of action a Texas knife dealer recognizes immediately: simple, mechanical, dependable.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and Where This Automatic Stiletto Stands

There was a time when a switchblade like this would’ve raised legal questions here. That time has passed. Texas dropped its statewide ban on switchblades and automatic knives years ago, and today, an automatic stiletto like this fits comfortably inside modern Texas knife law for most adults.

State law focuses less on how the blade opens and more on blade length and location. With a blade just over three inches, this automatic stiletto falls under the “location-restricted” threshold and is legal to carry in most day-to-day Texas settings—on the street, in your truck, in most businesses that don’t post their own restrictions.

Are OTF Knives Legal to Carry in Texas?

Yes. Texas treats OTF knives, switchblades, and other automatics as legal to own and carry for adults, as long as you respect blade length rules and avoid specific restricted locations like schools, some government buildings, and certain posted venues. The law doesn’t care whether the blade flicks out the front or swings from the side; it cares about inches and where you bring it. This stiletto’s 3.125-inch blade keeps it on the easier side of those rules.

Old-World Style, Modern Texas Reality

This knife wouldn’t have been welcome in a lot of pockets a decade or two back. Now, a Houston attorney can legally carry it in a briefcase, and a San Antonio bartender can keep it behind the bar. That shift in Texas knife law makes room for heritage designs like this one to leave the display case and see real use.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

They are. Texas removed the ban on switchblades and similar automatics, including OTF knives. For adults, the key points now are blade length and specific restricted locations. An automatic under 5.5 inches of blade, like this 3.125-inch stiletto, is generally legal for everyday carry across the state, as long as you stay out of prohibited places and respect any local or posted rules.

Is this automatic stiletto better suited for dress carry or work in Texas?

It leans hard toward dress carry. The white marble handle, polished bolsters, and narrow spear point make it a natural in a Houston boardroom, Austin office, or San Antonio date night—not in the back pasture cutting hose or zip-tying panels. It will handle light tasks cleanly, but its look and build favor jackets, vests, and console slots over tool belts and barn pockets.

How does this compare to an OTF knife for Texas everyday carry?

An OTF knife Texas buyers favor usually leans more tactical or utility—fast in and out of a pocket with a clip, ready to cut feed bags or break down boxes all week. This automatic stiletto trades that work-ready stance for heritage and style. It still fires one-handed, still rides light, but it does its best work when you’re in town, cleaned up, and want a blade that matches the boots on your feet.

Carrying It Home in a Texas Evening

Picture the first night you carry it. The air’s finally cooled after a long Central Texas day. You step out of a restaurant, jacket half-buttoned, white marble handle settled deep in your pocket. A loose thread on a cuff catches your eye. Thumb finds the button by feel, blade snaps out, thread is gone, blade folds, and the knife disappears again before the door swings shut behind you.

Nothing loud. Nothing for show. Just a slim, heritage automatic stiletto doing quiet work in a place where a good knife has always belonged.

Blade Length (inches) 3.125
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Material Marble
Button Type Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No