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Dragon Regent Concealed Blade Sword Cane - Black & Brass

Price:

10.46


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Dragon Regent Hidden Blade Sword Cane - Black & Brass

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This isn’t a toy cane with a flimsy spike inside. The Dragon Regent Hidden Blade Sword Cane conceals a 17-inch steel blade inside a straight black shaft, crowned by an ornate brass-finished dragon head handle. The draw is straightforward and controlled, the balance composed enough for both display and practical use. It stands as a regal fantasy piece that can live by the door, on the stand, or in the hand—always looking like a refined cane first, and a sword second.

10.46 10.46 USD 10.46

SWC901152

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Theme
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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Dragon Regent Sword Cane for Sale – Concealed Steel, Visible Authority

The Dragon Regent Hidden Blade Sword Cane is built around a simple idea: look like a serious cane until the moment you decide it’s not. A straight black shaft, a brass-accented collar, and an ornate dragon head handle hide a 17-inch steel blade that draws cleanly from the cane body. It’s a fantasy-forward piece, but the execution is grounded in real-world handling and balance.

Why Collectors Reach for a Dragon Regent Sword Cane Instead of Another Wall Hanger

Most sword canes announce themselves from across the room with overdone ornament and awkward proportions. This one does the opposite. The visual anchor is the dragon head: sculpted scales, open jaws, and an antique-style metallic finish that reads more like a classic walking stick than a novelty prop. The rest of the cane is intentionally restrained—smooth black shaft, single brass-colored collar, rubber tip for traction.

That restraint matters. It’s what lets this piece live by the door or beside a reading chair without screaming “hidden blade” to anyone who glances at it. When you separate shaft and handle, the 17-inch steel blade is slim, straight, and sized for a decisive thrust more than showy swings. It feels composed in the hand—balanced enough that you don’t immediately regret drawing it.

Mechanics of a Concealed Blade Cane – How the Dragon Regent Actually Works

This is not an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade design. Mechanically, the Dragon Regent is a concealed fixed blade housed inside a cane body. There is no spring, no button, no assisted mechanism. Deployment is all you: grip the dragon head handle, break the friction fit at the brass collar, and draw the blade straight from the shaft.

Concealment and Draw Feel

The concealment is based on a snug friction-style fit at the collar. When seated, the cane presents as a single, uninterrupted piece: black shaft, brass ring, dragon head. Under hand, you’ll feel that separation point, but visually it reads as a decorative band. The draw is linear and honest—no catches, no gimmicks. As long as you keep the shaft vertical and your grip firm on the handle, the blade clears cleanly.

Blade Length and Practical Balance

At 17 inches of exposed steel, this isn’t some stunted spike pretending to be a sword. The length is enough to matter while still fitting inside a 38-inch overall package that works as a cane for most users. Because the blade is relatively narrow, the weight stays manageable; you’re not dragging around a lead pipe. In hand, the dragon head gives you a defined indexing point—snout, crest, and scales create texture that locks into your grip when the blade is drawn.

Using and Displaying a Sword Cane – What This Piece Is Really For

This cane sits in that sweet spot between fantasy collectible and functional walking accessory. As a cane, the straight black shaft and rubber tip provide basic stability and traction on common indoor surfaces. As a display piece, the dragon head carries the visual weight—this is what gets picked up first when someone sees your rack or umbrella stand.

As a weapon, it is best understood as a thrust-oriented concealed fixed blade that happens to ride in a cane form factor. You’re not getting fencing-grade flex or a heavy-duty machete here; you’re getting a concealed steel option that’s there when you want more than bare hands, with styling that fits a dragon and fantasy-themed collection.

Legal Reality: What to Know Before Carrying a Sword Cane

With anything that conceals a blade inside something that looks like everyday gear, you need to understand the legal angle. In the United States, there is no single federal law that outright bans sword canes, but many states and municipalities treat them as prohibited concealed weapons or as disguised weapons.

In practical terms: in some jurisdictions, owning a sword cane at home is legal while carrying it in public is not. In others, both possession and carry are restricted. Laws often group sword canes with items like sword umbrellas, belt buckle knives, and other disguised blades. Before you carry this piece beyond your property, check your specific state and local laws—look under statutes for “disguised weapon,” “dangerous weapon,” or “concealed blade” rather than just “knife.” When in doubt, treat the Dragon Regent as a display and collection piece, not a daily mobility aid or defensive tool in public spaces.

Collector Details That Make the Dragon Regent Worth Owning

For collectors, value lives in the details. Here’s what sets this sword cane apart from the usual fantasy catalog filler:

  • Coherent Aesthetic: The black shaft, brass collar, and antique-style dragon head read as a unified design, not three random parts glued together.
  • Hidden Until Chosen: The blade doesn’t telegraph itself. Until you break the collar and draw, you’re just holding a dragon-themed cane.
  • Usable Proportions: A 17-inch concealed blade inside a 38-inch cane translates to a piece you can actually handle, not just hang.
  • Conversation-Ready: This is the piece guests ask about. You don’t have to explain it; the dragon head does the talking, and the hidden steel closes the story.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Automatic knives—often called autos or switchblades—have a specific legal framework. Under U.S. federal law (the Federal Switchblade Act), interstate commerce and mailing of automatic knives is restricted, with narrow exceptions for military and certain government use. However, most day-to-day legality questions come down to state and local law: some states allow automatic knives with blade length limits, some allow them for any law-abiding adult, and others restrict sale, carry, or both.

The Dragon Regent Hidden Blade Sword Cane is not an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade. It uses no spring or button and is not a folding blade. It is a concealed fixed blade inside a cane body, which often falls under separate “disguised weapon” or “concealed weapon” statutes. Before you buy an automatic knife for sale or plan to carry a sword cane like this, read your local laws carefully or consult a qualified legal source.

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

Mechanically, here’s how serious enthusiasts draw the lines:

  • Automatic knife: A folding or OTF knife that uses a spring to open the blade when you hit a button or switch. The blade is held closed under spring tension and deploys automatically.
  • OTF (out-the-front) knife: A subtype of automatic where the blade travels straight out of the front of the handle. Many are double-action, meaning the same control deploys and retracts the blade under spring tension.
  • Switchblade: In common U.S. legal language, essentially the same as an automatic knife—any knife that opens automatically by a button, switch, or similar device.

The Dragon Regent is none of those. It’s a straight, concealed fixed blade that you manually draw from the cane shaft. No springs, no button, no automatic action.

What makes this sword cane worth buying?

It earns its place in a collection by doing a few things well. First, it sells the illusion: from a distance, this looks like a legitimate dragon-themed cane, not a stunt prop. Second, the blade length and overall proportions actually make sense in the hand—you get 17 inches of usable steel instead of a token spike. Third, the styling is tight: black shaft, brass collar, and dragon head look intentional, not random. If you’re building out a dragon, fantasy, or concealed weapon-themed collection, this is the piece that sits at the intersection of display appeal and functional design.

Own It Because You Appreciate Concealed Engineering, Not Just Flash

If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how a mechanism feels, even when it’s something as simple as a friction-fit cane draw instead of an automatic knife deployment, the Dragon Regent Hidden Blade Sword Cane makes sense. It’s a concealed blade that respects proportions, a fantasy design that doesn’t look cheap, and a cane that can live in plain sight without giving away its second job. Add it to your collection as the piece that proves you’re paying attention to both form and function—not just chasing the next shiny thing.

Blade Length (inches) 17
Overall Length (inches) 38
Theme Dragon
Concealed Length (inches) 17
Concealment Type Cane