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Blue Marble Godfather Elegance + Stiletto Automatic Knife - Glossy Finish

Price:

9.97


Blackout Godfather Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Matte Black
Blackout Godfather Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Matte Black
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Godfather Blue Line Stiletto Switchblade - Gloss Blade
Godfather Blue Line Stiletto Switchblade - Gloss Blade
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Capo’s Reserve Slim Automatic Stiletto Knife - Blue Marble

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This automatic knife for sale is pure Godfather-line nostalgia with modern reliability. A slim, spear point stiletto snaps open on a decisive push button, backed by a safety slide that actually does its job. The glossy blue marble handle and polished bolsters give it that dress-knife attitude collectors look for. At 8.75" overall, it’s long, lean, and built to display as much as to deploy — the kind of automatic you buy because you appreciate classic Italian lines done right.

9.97 9.97 USD 9.97

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

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Automatic Knife for Sale with True Godfather-Line Attitude

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife that actually respects the classic Italian stiletto pattern, this one earns its place. The Capo’s Reserve Slim Automatic Stiletto Knife - Blue Marble isn’t pretending to be a hard-use tactical beater. It’s doing exactly what a Godfather-style automatic should: long, lean lines, decisive button-fired action, and a handle that looks like it stepped out of a vintage street shot.

At 8.75" overall with a 3.125" spear point blade and a 5" closed length, this automatic sits firmly in the full-size stiletto lane. The proportions are right, the silhouette is honest, and the action is the whole point.

Why This Automatic Knife Action Matters More Than Hype

Mechanically, this is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF. Press the front-facing button and a coil spring drives the blade from the handle in one clean arc. No half-hearted crawl, no gritty hesitation — just a proper snap. The difference between a good automatic and a drawer toy is how that first half-inch of movement feels. On this piece, the break from detent into full deployment is crisp and confident.

The button is correctly placed forward of center, right where your thumb naturally lands in a saber grip. Pair that with a separate safety slide, and you’ve got the classic Italian-style switchblade layout done in a modern automatic knife chassis: button for fire, slider for peace of mind.

Action, Lockup, and Real-World Reliability

On a stiletto like this, you’re not batonning wood — you’re asking for consistent deployment and trustworthy lockup. The internal spring is tuned for a fast, audible snap without beating the pivot to death. Once the spear point blade is out, the lock engages solidly so you don’t get that unnerving flex you see on cheap copies.

The safety switch is positioned close enough to ride with your thumb, but not so exposed that it drifts on its own in pocket or pouch. Slide it forward to arm, back to safe. Simple, mechanical, predictable — exactly how an automatic knife should behave.

Collector-Grade Aesthetics in an Automatic Knife for Sale

Let’s talk about why collectors will stop and look twice. The visual center here is the glossy blue marble handle. Not flat blue, not matte plastic — a swirling marble pattern that actually catches light alongside the polished silver bolsters and pommel. It reads like a dress stiletto, the kind of knife you set on a glass shelf next to other Godfather-era silhouettes.

Brass-colored pins contrast against the blue scales and silver hardware, giving you a three-tone palette that looks intentional, not accidental. The blade itself is a glossy-finished spear point — long, symmetrical, and dead in line with traditional Italian switchblade styling, but executed as a modern automatic knife.

Blade, Steel, and Edge Reality

The 3.125" spear point blade is ground for a true stiletto profile: narrow, thrust-biased, and visually straight from tang to tip. You’re dealing with a standard stainless steel formulation here — functional, corrosion-resistant, and easy to touch up with a basic stone or ceramic rod. This isn’t marketed as a super steel piece; it’s an honest stainless workhorse in a collector-forward frame.

Edge retention is perfectly adequate for light EDC and display duty. You’re not cutting miles of cardboard every day with this. You’re opening mail, trimming loose threads, maybe cutting a cigar cap — the sort of tasks this kind of automatic quietly excels at.

How This Automatic Knife Carries and Lives in the Real World

At 5" closed with no pocket clip, this is an old-school carry proposition. It rides best in a jacket pocket, back pocket, or dedicated slip. That’s correct for the pattern: traditional stilettos were never meant to be deep-carry clipped workhorses. They were slim, dramatic, and tucked out of sight until needed.

The straight handle and polished bolsters give you an easy draw, and the blue marble scales provide just enough traction without killing the dress-knife aesthetic. In hand, it’s exactly what you expect from a stiletto automatic: long, narrow, and surprisingly controllable for light cutting tasks.

Automatic Knives for Sale and the Legal Reality

Any serious dealer who offers an automatic knife for sale owes you straight talk on legality. In the United States, automatic knives (including side-opening automatics like this and OTF designs) are regulated at both the federal and state levels.

Federal law primarily addresses interstate commerce and shipping of automatic knives, with specific exceptions for military, law enforcement, and certain occupational uses. The real deciding factor for you is state and local law. Some states fully allow automatic knife ownership and carry, others allow ownership but restrict carry, and a few still heavily limit or ban automatic and switchblade-style knives outright.

Before you buy an automatic knife, check your state and municipal codes. Look for terms like “automatic knife,” “switchblade,” and “spring-activated” in the statutes. When in doubt, consult an attorney or your local authorities. This knife is sold with the expectation that you, the buyer, understand and comply with your local laws.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives exist in a patchwork of regulations. Federally, it’s legal for most manufacturers and dealers to sell automatic knives under specific conditions, but shipping across state lines can be restricted and often hinges on occupational or duty-related exemptions. The real variation happens at the state and local level.

Some states now allow automatic knives and switchblades for everyday carry, others allow them with blade length limits, and a few still prohibit them entirely or restrict them to law enforcement and military. There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. Before you buy an automatic knife, confirm current law where you live; statutes change, and “it used to be illegal” or “my buddy carries one” doesn’t count as legal advice.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where a spring drives the blade open when you press a button, lever, or similar control. This blue marble stiletto is a side-opening automatic: the blade pivots out from the side like a traditional folder, but under spring power.

An OTF (out-the-front) automatic knife deploys the blade linearly out of the front of the handle, usually in a double-action configuration where the same switch both extends and retracts the blade. A switchblade is the older, cultural and legal term most statutes use; in many laws it covers both side-opening automatics and OTFs. Enthusiasts tend to say “automatic” and then specify side-opener or OTF to be precise.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

This piece is worth buying because it nails the pattern and presence that Godfather-style collectors actually care about. The proportions are right, the spear point blade tracks clean with the handle, and the button-fired action has enough snap to be satisfying without feeling abusive.

Add the glossy blue marble handle, polished bolsters, and safety slide, and you get a classic Italian-style automatic configured for modern display and light EDC. It’s the knife you grab when you want that old-world stiletto profile with dependable modern mechanics — and you want it in a finish that actually looks good on the shelf.

For Enthusiasts Who Buy an Automatic Knife for the Right Reasons

If you’re here to buy an automatic knife just to say you own a “switchblade,” this probably isn’t your page. But if you appreciate the difference between a lazy spring and a tuned snap, between flat blue plastic and a properly glossy blue marble scale, this stiletto belongs in your lineup.

It’s an automatic knife for sale that respects the Godfather lineage, delivers honest, repeatable action, and gives you that unmistakable Italian silhouette without pretending to be something it’s not. In other words, the right tool for the collector who actually cares how their knives deploy, feel, and look.

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