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Skyline Ported Quick-Assist Stiletto Knife - Azure Blue

Price:

10.99


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Overpass Glide Spring-Assisted Stiletto Knife - Azure Blue

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/7205/image_1920?unique=eb2328e

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West of Fort Worth, gas station light bounces off chrome and glass and that bright blue blade in your pocket. This spring-assisted stiletto rides slim, ports in the steel keeping the weight down and the grip locked. Four inches of dagger-style stainless open with a clean, fast flick and settle into a firm liner lock. It disappears in a jeans pocket, deep-carry clip tight against the seam. Not a showpiece. A quick, sharp tool for the drive, the shift, and the walk back to the truck.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

PF29BL

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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When the Sky Turns Electric Over a Texas Overpass

The sun’s gone down over the mix of concrete and mesquite between Fort Worth and Weatherford. Sodium lights throw that strange yellow glow across lifted trucks, work vans, and the blue glint of a knife riding in your pocket. This spring-assisted stiletto wasn’t built for glass cases. It was built for late shifts, truck stop coffee, and the stretch of highway you know too well.

At five inches closed and nine open, it fits the hand like a fuel receipt folded lengthwise. Slim, straight, no wasted curve. The azure blue blade and handle match the spill of an LED light bar, easy to find in a dark cab or a blacked-out parking lot without ever looking loud in daylight. It’s a knife that looks as quick as it opens, and in this part of the world, that matters.

Why This Spring-Assisted Stiletto Fits Texas Carry Culture

In this state, a knife is just another tool a person keeps close. Console, pocket, boot, door pocket of a ranch truck—it needs to lie flat, ride light, and get out of the way until it’s time to work. This assisted-opening stiletto checks those boxes without drama.

The ported steel handle isn’t some design flourish. Those circular cutouts shave weight so the knife doesn’t drag your pocket down when you’re climbing bleachers at a Friday night game or stepping out of a hot cab in Midland. The deep-carry clip tucks it low enough that it doesn’t catch on a seatbelt or steering wheel, but it still draws clean when you reach for it.

The spring assist is tuned for one-handed opening with a quick press on the flipper tab. No wrist theatrics, no struggle. Just a firm push and a crisp, confident click as the blue dagger-style blade snaps into a secure liner lock. Gloves on, hands sweaty from August heat, or fingers stiff from a cold Panhandle wind—it still runs the same.

Edge in the City, Steel on the Highway

This isn’t a brush knife meant for cedar and barbwire all day. It’s for the everyday cuts that mark a work week in Houston, Dallas, or San Antonio. Breaking down cardboard in a warehouse off I-10. Cutting plastic banding on a pallet in a Laredo loading dock. Opening shrink wrap on parts under the hood of a truck that’s seen too many miles of I-35.

The four-inch stainless steel blade comes in a dagger profile with a central spine and plain edge. It’s slim, precise, and fast, more like a mechanical pencil than a camp blade. It slides under nylon straps, opens feed sacks, slices loose rope off a trailer gate, and handles those odd jobs that show up between clocking out and heading home—twine on tomato cages, tape on a moving box, cable ties in the garage.

The glossy blue finish isn’t just for looks. On dusty job sites outside Odessa or in dim parking garages under downtown towers, that color stands out against concrete, denim, and dash plastic. When you drop it between the console and the seat, you’ll find it faster than a plain steel knife lost in the shadows.

Texas Knife Laws and Spring-Assisted Stiletto Reality

Folks still walk into shops here asking if a spring-assisted blade is going to get them in trouble. That used to be a fair concern. It isn’t anymore. Texas changed its tune on automatic and assisted knives years back.

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, both out-the-front automatic knives and spring-assisted folders like this stiletto are legal to own and carry for most adults. The old switchblade bans are gone. What matters now is blade length and location restrictions—not the opening mechanism.

This knife runs a four-inch blade, keeping it within the range many Texans prefer for everyday carry. You still need to use common sense around schools, certain government buildings, and secure locations, because other rules and policies can apply there. But for daily life—from a mechanic’s bay in Waco to an apartment complex in El Paso—this assisted stiletto fits well within how modern Texas knife laws are written.

Understanding Texas Carry Context

Texas law now separates smaller everyday knives from longer "location-restricted" blades. This spring-assisted stiletto falls into the practical side of that line, making it a tool you can pocket without a second thought on a grocery run, commute, or night shift. It isn’t pretending to be a tactical monster; it’s an honest, fast-opening pocket knife that plays well with current statutes and the way Texans actually live.

How This Knife Rides in Real Texas Life

Picture a week that runs from a warehouse floor in Grand Prairie, to a buddy’s garage in Arlington, to a Sunday run down to the Brazos. That’s where this blue stiletto makes sense. The deep-carry clip lets it sink low in a front pocket so it doesn’t print under thinner summer jeans or catch the eye when you walk past a manager or a security guard at the door.

The straight, narrow handle doesn’t fight you when you sit in a truck for hours. No big palm swell digging into your hip. Just a flat profile against your leg, lightened by the ported steel so it doesn’t feel like a tool hanging off you all day. When you step out to check a loose strap on a utility trailer off US-290, it opens quick, cuts clean, and disappears again before your coffee has time to cool.

Texas-Specific Use Cases

On a muggy night in Houston, you’re working under a carport light, cutting hose and tape to get an old truck roadworthy by morning. The blue blade carries enough edge to handle rubber, cardboard, and light plastic without constant touching up. In an Amarillo windstorm, you’re cutting loose a tarp that’s half-torn off a fence. Gloves on, dust in your eyes, you still find the flipper tab and bring the blade out one-handed.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About Spring-Assisted Stiletto Knives

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Out-the-front knives and other automatics are legal for most adults under current Texas law, just like this spring-assisted stiletto. The key concerns now are blade length categories and restricted locations, not whether the blade is automatic, assisted, or manual. For everyday carry headed to work, the store, or a buddy’s place, this style of knife sits comfortably inside what the law allows.

Will this spring-assisted stiletto hold up in Texas heat?

The all-steel build and stainless blade stand up fine to a Houston summer or a Hill Country August as long as you treat it like any working knife—wipe it down, keep grit out of the pivot, and give the edge a touch-up when you’ve run it through cardboard and plastic all week. The glossy blue finish tolerates sweat, dust, and the odd drop in a truck bed without babying.

Is this the right knife if I already carry a larger Texas work blade?

If you already run a heavier belt knife or a big folder for ranch work or lease weekends, this makes sense as your city and road piece. Slim, fast, and easy to keep on you when you’re in shorts, business casual, or just running into H-E-B. It covers the quick daily cuts and lets your bigger blade stay where it belongs—on the job, at the lease, or in the toolbox.

First Night Out With It in Your Pocket

Imagine a warm fall night between San Marcos and New Braunfels. You’ve got the windows down, radio low, and that new blue knife riding deep in your pocket. You stop at a roadside stand, cut twine off a bundle, open a box, flick the blade shut, and slide it away. No show. No speech. Just a clean, quick cut and on with your life.

That’s what this spring-assisted stiletto is for: the Texas miles between work and home, the small jobs that pop up on the way, and the quiet assurance that when you reach into your pocket under the wash of highway lights, the tool you wanted is right where it should be—sharp, ready, and out of the way until called on.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Steel
Theme Stiletto
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock