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Don’s Legacy XL Push-Button Stiletto Switchblade - Wood Handle

Price:

20.87


Hard Ride Bull Emblem Biker Brass Knuckles - Bronze
Hard Ride Bull Emblem Biker Brass Knuckles - Bronze
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Marble Don XL Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - White Marble
Marble Don XL Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - White Marble
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Cinema Heritage Push-Button Automatic Stiletto Knife - Gloss Wood

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/1884/image_1920?unique=d940772

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This automatic knife for sale is a full-length, push-button Italian-style stiletto built for buyers who appreciate classic action. Hit the button and the 5-inch polished dagger blade snaps out with that unmistakable switchblade authority, backed by a sliding safety to lock things down. At 13 inches overall with glossy wood scales and metal bolsters, it’s part display piece, part working automatic—perfect for the collector who wants old-school presence with modern reliability.

20.87 20.87 USD 20.87

GFST9WD

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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 Knives for Sale That Still Respect the Classics

This isn’t another tactical toy. This is an automatic knife for sale that leans hard into the classic Italian stiletto lineage: long, lean dagger profile, bolstered guard, push-button deployment, and glossy wood that looks like it belongs in a black-and-white film frame. If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife with real presence, not just pocket filler, this is where you start paying attention.

Why This Push-Button Stiletto Automatic Knife Belongs in a Serious Collection

Collectors don’t buy on adjectives. They buy on mechanics, lineage, and how a knife feels when it snaps open. This stiletto switchblade-style automatic delivers a 5-inch polished dagger blade from a 7-inch closed body, for a full 13 inches of old-world attitude when open. The push-button action is coil-spring driven: press the button, the sear lets go, and the blade drives out along a consistent track until it hits a solid open lock.

Where cheap autos feel mushy or hesitant, this pattern rewards you with a crisp, authoritative opening that’s more about timing and tuning than brute spring strength. The long, narrow profile makes every millimeter of travel visible, which is exactly why collectors love this style—there’s nowhere for sloppy engineering to hide.

Action, Lockup, and Safety: The Mechanism Story

This is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF. The blade pivots from the bolster end like a traditional folder, but the deployment is fully automatic via the central push button. A sliding safety switch sits just above the button: up to block the button and lock it down in pocket, down to arm the action for instant deployment.

Once open, the internal lock bar engages with the tang so you’re not just holding a spring-loaded novelty, you’re holding a locked automatic ready for display or light utility. The long-throw blade gives you a clear sense of when it’s fully open—there’s a definitive mechanical stop and an audible click that collectors listen for.

Steel, Edge, and Real-World Use

The polished stainless dagger blade is ground with dual edges visually, but only one primary sharpened cutting edge with a crisp center spine. You’re getting classic dagger symmetry with a practical cutting surface designed for slicing, light piercing, and clean display lines. The stainless steel keeps maintenance simple: wipe it down, oil the pivot, and it stays glossy instead of turning into a rust project.

This isn’t a hard-use field knife, and it doesn’t pretend to be. It’s an automatic stiletto built for collection, occasional carry, and that satisfying deployment when you want to feel a real switchblade-style snap in hand.

Buy Automatic Knife Designs That Actually Look This Good

Most automatic knives for sale in this price and size range go tactical: black handles, coated blades, aggressive jimping. This one takes a different path. The glossy warm brown wood scales, polished bolsters, and clean brass pins push it firmly into heritage territory. It reads more like a vintage Italian switchblade than a modern combat knife, and that’s the point.

The 7-inch closed length fills the hand. There’s enough handle to anchor the blade without any cramped grip, and the straight stiletto profile gives you an easy, intuitive orientation in the dark—bolster forward, button centered. With no pocket clip cluttering the lines, it carries best in a sheath or jacket, which is exactly how these were meant to be carried before everyone decided every knife needed a clip.

Collector Details That Separate This from Commodity Autos

  • Classic stiletto geometry: Long, slim body with a full 5-inch dagger blade for unmistakable silhouette on the shelf or in hand.
  • Gloss wood scales: Not plastic pretending to be something else—actual wood with visible grain and a polished finish that catches light.
  • Bolsters and quillons: Front bolsters and small quillons at the guard echo traditional Italian patterns, grounding this firmly in stiletto history.
  • Dedicated safety: Sliding safety separate from the button, a detail many throwaway autos skip but collectors expect on a proper switchblade-style piece.

Is This the Best Automatic Knife for EDC or for Display?

If your definition of the best automatic knife for EDC is something compact, clipped, and ready to cut boxes 20 times a day, this isn’t it—and that honesty matters. At 13 inches open, this is more statement than stealth, more display case than drywall. Where it shines is controlled carry and collection: jacket pocket with the nylon sheath, desk drawer, range bag, display stand, or alongside other classic switchblade designs.

The weight and length give it a reassuring in-hand presence. For occasional EDC, it’ll handle light cutting, letter opening, and general utility just fine. But its real value is owning a large-format, push-button automatic that looks and behaves like the classic film-era stilettos that pulled many of us into automatics in the first place.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the United States, federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act) mainly regulates interstate commerce in automatic knives and switchblades—how they’re shipped and sold across state lines. It does not automatically make it illegal to own or carry an automatic knife. Actual carry and possession rules are set at the state and sometimes local level.

Some states now allow automatic knives for most adults with few restrictions. Others limit blade length, restrict carry to one-handed opening but not full autos, or ban switchblade-style mechanisms outright. Before you buy an automatic knife or carry one, you need to check your current state and local laws, including city and county ordinances. Laws change; when in doubt, consult up-to-date statutes or a qualified legal source rather than relying on rumor or old forum posts.

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

Mechanically, here’s the breakdown:

  • Automatic knife: A folding knife where the blade opens by itself when you press a button, lever, or slide, powered by an internal spring. This stiletto is a side-opening automatic knife.
  • OTF (Out-The-Front): A specific type of automatic where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle rather than pivoting from the side. Many OTF knives are double action—press to extend, press again to retract.
  • Switchblade: In common use and many laws, “switchblade” is the older term that usually covers both side-opening automatic knives and some OTF designs. In enthusiast circles, we often reserve it for classic push-button autos like this Italian-style stiletto.

This piece is a side-opening, push-button automatic knife with a classic switchblade stiletto profile—not an OTF.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Three things: scale, style, and action. Scale, because 13 inches open with a 5-inch dagger blade is not subtle—it commands space in a collection. Style, because the wood, bolsters, and stiletto geometry deliver that undeniable vintage switchblade look so many modern autos completely ignore. And action, because the push-button, coil-spring deployment with a dedicated safety gives you the full automatic experience—press, snap, lock—without wobble, overcomplication, or gimmicks.

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife that scratches the movie-classic itch while still being functional enough for light carry, this is the one that earns its spot.

For Enthusiasts Who Actually Care How Their Automatic Knife Works

Owning an automatic knife for sale like this isn’t about chasing the latest tacticool fad. It’s about respecting a design language that made switchblades iconic in the first place: long, clean lines, honest materials, a decisive button-driven snap, and a safety that shows someone thought about real-world carry. If you’re the kind of buyer who can tell the difference between a lazy auto and a properly tuned stiletto, this piece will make sense the second you hit that button.

Blade Length (inches) 5
Overall Length (inches) 13
Closed Length (inches) 7
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Push
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No