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Godfather-Style Kriss-Wave Stiletto Switchblade - Midnight Black

Price:

16.99


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Silent Consigliere Kriss-Edge Automatic Stiletto - Midnight Black

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/1802/image_1920?unique=26f2104

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Late night on I‑35, jacket on the seat, this Godfather-style automatic stiletto rides quiet in the console. One thumb finds the push button and that kriss blade snaps out with a clean, steel note. At 8.75 inches overall with a 3.25-inch polished wave edge, glossy black handle, and safety switch, it’s made for the Texan who likes their knife like their suit: sharp, understated, and ready when things turn sideways.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

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When a Suit Coat Knife Lives in a Texas Truck

The sun's gone down outside a Hill Country dance hall. Trucks nose up to the caliche, dust hanging in the lights. Jacket’s on the bench seat, boots on the ground, and this Godfather-style automatic stiletto rides in the console, quiet as a kept secret. One push of that round button and the kriss-wave blade snaps out fast and clean, more dress knife than ranch tool, but right at home in a state where a man might go from courthouse to back road in the same day.

This isn’t a work rancher’s beater. It’s the blade you carry when the shirt’s pressed, the hat’s shaped right, and you still want steel on you that opens without a fight.

Texas OTF Knife Culture, Italian Dress Steel Attitude

Walk into any small-town shop off Highway 281 and ask where to buy an OTF knife in Texas or a switchblade that feels like the old movies, and you’ll get pointed toward pieces like this. Long, narrow, Italian-style profile. Polished bolsters that catch the fluorescent light. A glossy midnight black handle that looks more like it belongs with a sport coat than a tool belt.

The kriss-style wave on the 3.25-inch polished steel blade gives it that extra edge of drama. It’s not just about cutting – though it’ll open feed sacks, slice tape, or trim leather clean enough – it’s about the way it moves. Press the button, feel the spring drive the blade out in a straight, decisive motion, then lock with authority. In a world of chunky tactical folders, this slender automatic stiletto sits in the hand like a fountain pen, not a pry bar.

How This Texas Automatic Stiletto Actually Carries

On Houston nights, it disappears into a suit coat inner pocket, riding flat and light. In Fort Worth, it tucks into a boot top at the stockyards, the polished pommel just low enough it won’t print through denim. Out in Midland, it lives in the center console, wedged beside registration papers and a worn-down pen, ready for those quick cuts on the jobsite when you don’t want to haul out a bigger blade.

At 5 inches closed and 8.75 inches overall, it strikes that in-between size: long enough for reach, thin enough not to feel like a brick. No pocket clip to snag on seats or steering wheels – this one is made for pocket, vest, console, or boot. The glossy black handle scales stay smooth against cloth, while the polished steel bolsters give your fingers a clear index point when you reach for it in the dark.

The push-button action is simple. Thumb rolls over the circle, presses down, and the kriss blade flashes out with a crisp note – no rattle, no drag. A sliding safety on the handle face lets you lock it closed when you’re throwing it in a bag or climbing into a deer blind before sunrise. It’s the kind of switchblade a Texas buyer keeps close, not because they need it every minute, but because when they do, they don’t want to think about how it opens.

Texas Knife Law, Switchblades, and What This Means for You

For years, folks asked: are OTF knives legal in Texas, are switchblades legal in Texas, can I carry an automatic stiletto in town without catching trouble? That changed in 2013 when Texas removed the ban on switchblades, and again in 2017 when most blade length limits were cleared out for adults in most places.

This automatic stiletto sits under the common 5.5-inch blade length folks still think about, with its 3.25-inch polished steel edge well inside the numbers. Under current Texas knife laws, adults can legally own and carry automatic knives and switchblades like this in most everyday settings. There are still restricted locations – schools, certain government buildings, some events – where any blade can get you sideways, so a smart carrier keeps up with local rules and posted signs. But for regular daily life, from San Antonio sidewalks to Lubbock parking lots, this kind of switchblade is legal to carry for most adults.

That sliding safety isn’t there for the law; it’s there for peace of mind. Toss it in your glove box on a long run between Amarillo and Wichita Falls, lock the safety, and you don’t worry about that blade waking up in a tangle of paperwork and work gloves.

Kriss-Wave Style, Texas Uses

The kriss-wave spear point on this blade isn’t just for show, though it does draw eyes when you thumb it open at a tailgate. That wavy edge tracks clean through shrink wrap, tape, and plastic banding, giving more bite at the start of the cut. When you’re breaking down boxes behind a bar in Austin or trimming line in a dimly lit feed room near Nacogdoches, the polished steel and distinct profile help you see where the tip is going even in weak light.

Gold-tone pins and polished steel bolsters frame the handle like cufflinks on a dark shirt. Collectors from Dallas to El Paso buy this kind of Godfather-style automatic stiletto as much for the glass-case look as for the cut. But once it’s in hand, even the skeptics admit: it opens fast, feels balanced, and handles those small, quick jobs that come up in real Texas days – opening a pack of brake pads in a hot garage, cutting a strip of tape on a cooler at the coast, or shaving a frayed end off a lariat in the barn.

Console Companion on the Open Road

Run Highway 90 out west, long gaps between towns, and this knife makes sense in the console. No pocket clip digging into your side, just a slim, dressy automatic switchblade waiting in reach. Tire blows, strap needs trimming, tarp needs a clean cut – push, snap, done, and back into its place.

Suit Coat Steel in the City

In downtown Austin or Dallas, it carries like a gentleman’s knife. Slides into an inner pocket beside a billfold, hardly a weight. You step out of a meeting and straight into a parking garage where a box needs opened or a zip tie needs cut, and that quick automatic action saves the fumbling.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About OTF Knife Texas Options

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives and switchblades – including OTF knives and Godfather-style automatic stilettos like this – are legal for most adults to own and carry in everyday life. The old switchblade ban is gone. The main thing is blade length and location. This 3.25-inch blade sits under the old 5.5-inch benchmark many Texans still use as a comfort line. You still need to watch for restricted places like schools, some government buildings, and certain posted venues where any knife can be a problem. But for normal daily carry across the state, an automatic switchblade of this size is lawful for most adults.

Is this Godfather-style stiletto more for Texas carry or display?

It does both. The classic Italian stiletto profile, glossy midnight black handle, and kriss-wave polished blade make it a natural for the display case in a Houston shop or on a shelf in a San Antonio office. But the size, push-button automatic action, and usable spear point edge make it practical for real carry – in a boot at a rodeo, in a console on West Texas drives, or in a suit coat at a Fort Worth steakhouse.

How does this compare to a true OTF knife for Texas buyers?

If you’re hunting the best OTF knife in Texas for heavy work or tactical use, you’ll want a double-action OTF built for abuse. This Godfather-style automatic stiletto is for a different kind of Texan moment. It opens fast with a single push, locks solid, and then folds back into a slim handle. Think dress carry, night-life, and console duty – the blade you pull when you want something that looks as good as it cuts, not just another chunky tool.

Where This Knife Fits in a Texas Day

Picture a Friday night in San Antonio. Heat still holding in the pavement, music bleeding out from a bar door. You slide into your truck, door shuts, and the world gets quiet. Hand drops to the console, fingers find the smooth, glossy shape of this midnight-black automatic stiletto. You thumb the safety off, press the button, and that kriss-wave blade snaps out, bright against the dim cab light.

You’re not dressing a deer, you’re not cutting fence; you’re trimming a tag, slicing a strap, opening a package that’s waited all week. The knife feels right in hand – long, narrow, balanced. It looks like it belongs with pressed denim and a clean white shirt. In a state where steel still matters, this is the kind of blade a Texan carries when they clean up, lock the house, and head into town.

Blade Length (inches) 3.25
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Button Type Push
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No