Skip to Content
Crimson Cloud Anime-Tactical Spring Assisted Knife - Midnight Black

Price:

8.99


Tri‑Grid Command Double Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
Tri‑Grid Command Double Action OTF Knife - Matte Black
36.99 36.99
Blossom Geisha Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Black Tanto
Blossom Geisha Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Black Tanto
8.99 8.99

Shadowrise Crimson Cloud Spring-Assisted Blade - Midnight Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/694/image_1920?unique=973dad3

7 sold in last 24 hours

You’re parked under a sodium light behind a Houston warehouse, breaking down boxes before the night cools off. The spring-assisted blade jumps free on a straight press, tanto tip biting into tape and strapping without wandering. Matte black steel, anime-red clouds, liner lock solid. It rides light in the pocket, low clip and no sharp edges. Not a showpiece—just a fast, blacked-out knife with enough style to feel like yours every time it snaps open.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

A102BKW

Not Available For Sale

4 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
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

The sun’s dropped behind a line of mesquites outside a San Angelo distribution yard. The air’s still hot off the asphalt, and you’ve got pallet wrap, banding, and stubborn plastic to cut before you head home. The Shadowrise Crimson Cloud spring-assisted blade comes out of the pocket clean, flipper tab under your index finger, and that black tanto edge is already moving before you finish the thought.

Why this assisted knife belongs in a Texas pocket

This isn’t a glass case piece. It’s built for the way Texans actually carry—clipped to the inside of work jeans in Midland, riding in the console of a F-150 rolling I-35, or pinned against basketball shorts at a late-night H-E-B run. At 5 inches closed and 4.21 ounces, it settles into the pocket without dragging or printing. The low-profile clip keeps it tight to the seam, so it doesn’t catch every time you slide into a truck seat.

The spring assist brings it from closed to locked with a single, straight-through press on the flipper. No thumb stud hunting, no awkward wrist flicks. In a hot parking lot or along a windy Panhandle fence line, that predictable deployment matters more than any spec sheet bragging.

American tanto workhorse for Texas materials

Texas work isn’t gentle. Cardboard in a Houston ship channel warehouse picks up grit. Feed bags in Amarillo get tossed, kicked, and stacked until the fibers turn stubborn. The matte black American tanto blade on this spring-assisted knife was built for that kind of punishment. The reinforced tip gives you confident puncture starts in pallet wrap and tightly strapped boxes without feeling fragile. Once you’re in, the long plain edge runs clean through tape, nylon, and corrugate.

The matte finish earns its keep on bright days. Out on a lease road near Odessa, it won’t flash sunlight back at you. Under shop lights in a Fort Worth garage, it hides wear and the scuffs that come from scraping gaskets or scoring plastic barrels. There’s no serration to snag on cloth or fray paracord—just a straight, honest edge that sharpens easy and cuts what Texans actually put in front of a blade.

Anime clouds, West Texas attitude

The first thing most people see is the crimson cloud motif—anime-inspired, thrown across matte black ABS scales and blade like a storm bank on the horizon. It’s not loud for the sake of it. The red-on-black pops in a glove box in Laredo or on a shop counter in Abilene, making it easy to pick out from a pile of tools. But in the pocket, it’s all business: dark handle, dark blade, graphics turned inward unless you decide otherwise.

The ABS handle doesn’t chase tactical buzzwords. It’s simply shaped, with a neutral grip that fits big and small hands across Texas. Jimping near the pivot gives your thumb something to bite into when your palms are slick with sweat or engine oil. The flipper tab pulls double duty as a guard, keeping your fingers where they belong when you’re muscling through tough plastic or thick rope.

Texas carry culture and this spring-assisted knife

Across the state, from Corpus Christi docks to North Dallas office parks, a pocket knife is less fashion and more habit. This assisted opener fits the unspoken rules: fast when you need it, quiet when you don’t. No flashy button to draw eyes on the jobsite, no stiletto profile to spook anyone at a Hill Country farmers’ market. Just a liner lock, a flipper, and a blade that gets to work.

Drop it in a backpack headed for a Baylor dorm or tuck it into the door pocket of a ranch truck outside Uvalde—either way it’s the same story. You’re one motion from a locked, ready blade, and one thumb push on the liner away from closing it back into a safe, slim package. No safeties to fumble, no complicated mechanism to explain when a buddy borrows it to cut hay twine.

Texas knife laws, assisted opening, and everyday use

Across the state, people still ask if a spring-assisted knife sits in the same legal bucket as an automatic or old-school switchblade. Under current Texas law, assisted opening folders like this one are treated as standard pocket knives, not as prohibited switchblades or restricted OTF automatics. The blade folds into the handle, there’s no button on the side to fire it straight out, and it still takes a deliberate motion to start the opening.

What that means in practical terms: for most adults who aren’t otherwise prohibited from carrying knives, this spring-assisted blade fits everyday carry expectations at a gas station in Waco, a feed store in Navasota, or walking out of the office in Plano. As always, buyers should stay aware of specific local policies—courthouses, certain workplaces, and private properties can set their own rules—but as a category, this isn’t the kind of knife Texas law is trying to keep out of ordinary pockets.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

True OTF automatics—where the blade shoots straight out of the handle—used to sit in a gray area alongside traditional switchblades. Texas law has since relaxed, and adults can own and carry automatic and OTF knives in most everyday situations. Size, location, and restricted premises still matter, but the simple presence of a spring or button isn’t the automatic red flag it once was. This particular knife is not an OTF knife; it’s a spring-assisted folder that opens along a pivot.

How this spring-assisted blade compares to a Texas OTF knife

In a state where folks google “best OTF knife in Texas” right after checking traffic on I-10, the comparison comes up often. An OTF automatic usually deploys with a thumb slide or button, blade driving straight out of the spine. Fast, flashy, and mechanically more complex. This assisted opener lives in the quieter middle ground. You nudge the flipper, the spring finishes the arc, and the blade locks up with the same certainty you’d expect from a Texas OTF knife—without the extra bulk or mechanism.

For someone who wants that quick, confident deployment on a ranch in Brady or in an Austin warehouse but doesn’t feel like explaining an automatic to every supervisor, this format makes sense. You still get one-handed use slipping between rolls of construction plastic, cutting zip ties under a trailer, or opening shipments at a San Marcos storefront.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Today, a full automatic or OTF knife is generally legal for most adults to own and carry in Texas, with key exceptions: certain locations like schools, courthouses, and secure government buildings remain off limits, and large blades can raise extra restrictions in sensitive places. The law focuses more on where and how you carry than on the fact that a knife is an OTF or automatic. When in doubt, Texans check current statutes before clipping a true OTF knife to the pocket.

Why pick this spring-assisted knife over a Texas OTF knife?

If your day runs from Buc-ee’s stops to jobsite walkthroughs, this knife’s lower profile can matter more than raw speed. You get a fast, one-handed opening that feels close to an OTF knife Texas buyers look for, but in a format that stays under the radar in offices, shops, and service calls. No questions from the boss, no second looks from a customer—just a knife that works.

Is this knife enough for ranch, lease, and shop use?

For most Texas days, yes. The American tanto blade handles feed bags, braided rope, and stubborn plastic tubs without complaint. The ABS handle shrugs off sweat and dust from a caliche road. If you’re dressing game on a South Texas lease every weekend, you might bring a fixed blade along too—but as a daily cutter for chores, runs into town, and truck life, this spring-assisted folder earns its spot.

Built for the first cut and the hundredth

Picture the first time you put it to work: tailgate down, south of Lubbock, wind pushing dust across the pasture as you slice through bailing twine. Or under LED drop lights in a Dallas garage, opening parts boxes while the radio runs in the corner. The flipper moves, the blade snaps, the crimson clouds flash once and settle back into your grip.

From there, it stops being a design and starts being your normal. The knife you reach for in a San Antonio parking lot to cut nylon strap, in an East Texas driveway to break down Amazon boxes, or in the dark of a deer camp to slice cord. Not the loudest tool in the drawer—just the one that keeps showing up when a Texan needs a blade.

Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 4.21
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style American Tanto
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material ABS
Theme Akatsuki
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock