Skip to Content
Divine Strike Cross Cutout Brass Knuckles - Gold

Price:

5.61


Heritage Roadster Bolster-Release Stiletto Automatic Knife - Ivory
Heritage Roadster Bolster-Release Stiletto Automatic Knife - Ivory
9.97 9.97
Milano Marble Micro Stiletto Automatic Knife - Purple
Milano Marble Micro Stiletto Automatic Knife - Purple
6.34 6.34

Sanctified Impact Buckle-Fit Brass Knuckles - Gold

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/1880/image_1920?unique=c0ce67f

14 sold in last 24 hours

Gold catches the light, the cross anchors your grip, and the buckle-fit bar locks the profile into place. The Sanctified Impact Buckle-Fit Brass Knuckles in gold deliver a four-finger fit with a central Holy Cross cutout that reads more like a statement relic than a throwaway novelty. Smooth, rounded finger holes, a compact 4.16" x 2.28" frame, and a buckle-ready lower bar make this piece ideal for display, costume, or collection where symbolism matters as much as impact heritage.

5.61 5.61 USD 5.61

PW495GD

Not Available For Sale

9 people are viewing this right now

  • Theme
  • Length (inches)
  • Width (inches)
  • Color

This combination does not exist.

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

You May Also Like These

Sanctified Impact Buckle-Fit Brass Knuckles - Gold

The Cardinal Cross Buckle-Ready Brass Knuckles in gold are built around one clear idea: symbolism and impact heritage in a compact, buckle-ready frame. This isn’t a random novelty casting. The central Holy Cross cutout, four-finger profile, and polished gold finish turn a classic knuckle duster form into a statement piece for collections, displays, and costume rigs where the visual story matters as much as the metal.

Gold Brass Knuckles for Sale with Buckle-Ready Design

When you’re looking for brass knuckles for sale that do more than fill a slot in a display case, details like proportions and cutouts matter. This design measures roughly 4.16 inches across by 2.28 inches tall, giving it a compact footprint that still reads full-size in the hand. The smooth, rounded finger holes are sized for a four-finger fit, while the integrated horizontal bar along the bottom edge makes buckle carry and belt-mounted display straightforward for those using it as part of a costume or themed wardrobe.

The polished gold finish is not subtle—and that’s the point. On a shelf, in a retail case, or mounted as a belt buckle, it catches light immediately. Retail buyers get a conversation piece that stands out from generic dark-toned knuckles. Collectors get a religious-themed variant that doesn’t disappear into a row of near-identical silhouettes.

Cross-Themed Knuckle Duster Construction and Ergonomics

Mechanically, brass knuckles are simple—no moving parts, no springs, nothing automatic to tune. That puts all the pressure on form, weight, and contour. Here, the four primary finger rings are smoothly rounded on the interior edges to reduce hot spots when gripped. The outside profile maintains that classic knuckle duster sweep, but the central real estate has been given to a Holy Cross cutout that breaks up the mass and defines the piece visually.

Four-Finger Fit with Centered Cross Cutout

The four-finger arc is laid out with enough width to accommodate an average adult hand without feeling oversized. The centered cross cutout is more than decorative—by removing material, it slightly lightens the middle of the frame, which subtly shifts perceived balance toward the fingers rather than the palm. It’s a small change, but in-hand, it avoids the clunky block feel some cheap cast knuckles suffer from.

Buckle-Ready Lower Bar and Top Stud Detail

The horizontal bar along the bottom does double duty as a grip stabilizer and a natural mounting point for buckle conversions and display hardware. Above the center ring, a small protruding stud adds a visual break and a touchpoint if you’re orienting the piece by feel. For collectors, those minor deviations from a plain oval slab are what separate a display-worthy knuckle from a bin item.

Collector Appeal: Religious Symbolism Meets Street-Era Profile

Most buyers picking up brass knuckles today are not building a modern EDC loadout—they’re building a collection, a costume kit, or a themed display. The Cardinal Cross / Sanctified Impact profile leans into that reality. The Holy Cross motif anchors the piece in religious and cultural symbolism, while the classic four-hole silhouette keeps it rooted in the recognizable knuckle duster tradition.

In a collection, this plays well next to skulls, flags, and other motif-heavy pieces, but the cross-and-gold combination gives it a more ceremonial, almost reliquary feel. That tension—between faith iconography and impact-tool history—is exactly what makes it memorable. A buyer scanning a crowded case is going to remember “the gold cross knuckles,” and that’s how you know it earns its space.

Legal Context: What to Know Before You Carry Brass Knuckles

Any time you’re dealing with impact tools like brass knuckles, legal context matters just as much as design. Unlike knives, where federal law focuses heavily on automatic and switchblade mechanisms, brass knuckles are largely regulated at the state and local level in the United States. There is no single federal standard that makes this specific style universally legal or illegal nationwide.

In many states, owning brass knuckles may be legal while carrying them concealed, carrying them in public, or using them can be restricted or outright prohibited. Other states classify them as prohibited weapons altogether. Some jurisdictions make a distinction between metal knuckles and plastic or novelty variants; others do not.

That means one thing for serious buyers and retailers: check your local laws before you carry or resell. Treat this as a collectible, display piece, or costume component by default unless you’ve confirmed that carry and use are legal where you live. When in doubt, it’s safer to keep brass knuckles as part of a private collection or controlled display rather than everyday wear.

Display, Retail, and Collection Use Cases

This buckle-fit brass knuckle design is particularly well-suited to three roles: retail attention-getter, themed display piece, and collection variant.

Retail and Buckle Display Presence

In a storefront or show table environment, the polished gold finish and cross-shaped void read instantly from a distance. The compact proportions let you stack several units in a case without clutter, but a single piece on a buckle mount or display stand is often enough to pull a customer in. For belt buckle conversions, the flat lower bar gives you a straightforward anchor point for hardware while keeping the front view clean.

Collection Variety and Themed Builds

Collectors who already own standard knuckle dusters get something different here: religious iconography in a street-informed form factor. It pairs cleanly with faith-themed blades, gothic jewelry, or costume rigs where a cross motif is already present. The gold finish avoids blending into darker metals, making it a natural centerpiece in a tray or shadow box.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Automatic knife law in the United States is a mix of federal and state rules. Federally, the primary statute is the Switchblade Knife Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 1241–1245), which restricts the interstate commerce and mailing of switchblades and most automatic knives, with specific exemptions for military, law enforcement, and certain occupational uses. However, possession and carry are mostly governed by state law. Some states allow automatic knives with few restrictions, others limit blade length or carry method, and some still prohibit them outright. Always check your state and local statutes—what’s legal in one jurisdiction can be a chargeable offense in another.

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

All automatic knives deploy the blade using a spring or stored energy, activated by a button, switch, or lever—no manual opening is required once the mechanism is engaged. A switchblade is essentially a legal and cultural term for an automatic knife and is often used in statutes; it usually refers to side-opening autos where the blade pivots out from the handle. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is a specific subtype of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle. OTFs can be single-action (auto deploy, manual retract) or double-action (auto deploy and auto retract using the same control). All three share the automatic deployment concept, but OTF describes the direction of travel, while switchblade usually describes the legal category.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

This product is a brass knuckle, not an automatic knife, so there is no spring or deployment mechanism at play here. The value is in the design: the Holy Cross cutout, the polished gold finish, and the buckle-ready lower bar that makes it ideal for display or costume use. For collectors, it earns its place as a distinctive, religious-themed variant in a lineup that’s often dominated by generic skulls and plain metal slabs.

For Collectors Who Choose Their Gear with Intent

Whether you already collect automatic knives, OTFs, and other action-driven pieces, or you’re building out a broader impact-tool and blade display, the Cardinal Cross / Sanctified Impact Buckle-Fit Brass Knuckles in gold bring something different to the table. This is a compact, buckle-ready brass knuckle built around a clear visual thesis: faith iconography framed in a classic four-finger silhouette, finished in high-contrast gold. It’s the kind of piece you remember, and that’s exactly what a serious collector or retailer should demand from every addition to their lineup.

Theme Holy Cross
Length (inches) 2.28
Width (inches) 4.16
Color Gold