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Gilded Orb Court-Style Sword Cane - Gold/Black

Price:

11.70


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Regal Orb Theater Sword Cane - Gold/Black

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This isn’t a fighting cane; it’s stagecraft with a spine. The Regal Orb Theater Sword Cane hides a 15.5-inch unsharpened steel blade in a threaded black shaft, capped by a gold-relief court-style handle and polished orb pommel. At 42.5 inches overall with a rubber-tipped base, it’s built for cosplay, costume, and display where visual authority matters more than edge geometry—perfect for collectors and performers who want presence, not pretense.

11.70 11.7 USD 11.70

SWCMKM150GD

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

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Regal Orb Theater Sword Cane - Gold/Black

The Gilded Orb Court-Style Sword Cane isn’t pretending to be a covert self-defense tool. It’s exactly what it looks like: a showpiece with courtly attitude and just enough hidden steel to keep the story interesting. Gold-relief handle, polished orb pommel, black steel shaft, and a 15.5-inch unsharpened blade behind a threaded lock—this is stage presence you can lean on.

Why This Sword Cane Works As A Display Piece First

Let’s be clear about the job this piece is built for. This is a sword cane designed for cosplay, theater, and collection display, not a sharpened combat stick. The blade is straight, unsharpened steel running 15.5 inches, concealed inside a 42.5-inch overall cane body. The handle is where the story really lives: ornate gold-tone relief, capped with a polished orb pommel that reads more royal court than back alley.

The black metal shaft does the visual lifting, too—slim, clean, and broken only by a brass-colored ring at the joint. That ring is your visual tell that something more is going on here, without shouting it. Add the rubber tip at the bottom and you’ve got a prop that can actually touch the ground without wrecking floors or making the stage manager hate you.

Threaded Lock Mechanism: How The Hidden Blade Is Secured

This isn’t an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade—there’s no spring, no button, no surprise deployment. The steel is hidden by a threaded locking mechanism at the joint between the gold handle and the black cane shaft. You unscrew the handle section from the shaft to reveal the blade; you screw it down tight to re-conceal it.

Why Threaded Lock Matters On A Sword Cane

A threaded joint does two important things on a piece like this:

  • Security over speed – You’re not drawing this like an automatic knife; you’re prioritizing a solid, rattle-free fit so the cane looks and feels like one continuous piece.
  • Reliability during movement – For cosplay and theatrical use, you can walk, pose, gesture, and move on stage without the upper section loosening itself open mid-scene.

Collectors who have handled cheap novelty sword canes know the usual failure mode—loose threads, wobbly fit, blade section that spins or rattles. Here, the threaded lock is the entire mechanical story: positive engagement, clean break at the joint, and a defined stop when tightened.

Blade & Build: What You’re Actually Getting

The internal blade is straight, unsharpened steel at 15.5 inches. That unsharpened edge is deliberate: this is built for costume, display, and conversation, not cutting tests or defensive carry. The overall 42.5-inch length and 8.5-inch handle give it a believable walking cane profile, especially with the rubber tip anchoring the base visually and physically.

If you’re the sort of buyer who cares about edge geometry, grind consistency, and steel hardness, you already know that’s not the point here. This one earns its place in a collection for its silhouette, contrast, and presence—gold and orb against black shaft—not for its cutting performance.

Sword Cane For Sale: Built For Cosplay, Stage, And Display

When you buy a sword cane like this, you’re buying a role. Steampunk ambassador, fantasy court advisor, masked ball antagonist—whatever your character, this cane reads as high-status with a secret. The gold-relief handle and large orb pommel catch and throw light, making it play well on camera and under stage lighting.

Collectors will recognize the classic European court-cane influence in the relief work and orb top, but the black shaft and brass ring pull it toward a steampunk or fantasy aesthetic. It’s the kind of piece that holds its own on a stand next to helmets, masks, or ornate daggers, even if you never unscrew it to show the blade.

Legal & Practical Context: What This Actually Is

Because there is a hidden blade involved, legal context always matters—even if you’re buying for display. This is a concealed-blade sword cane, not an automatic knife and not a switchblade. There is no spring-assisted deployment, no button, no automatic action of any kind.

In the United States, federal law primarily focuses on automatic knives, switchblades, and interstate commerce. Sword canes and concealed blades are usually governed at the state and local level. Many jurisdictions treat cane swords and similar concealed blades far more restrictively than openly carried knives, regardless of whether they are sharpened.

Translation: this is ideal for private property use, display, cosplay photoshoots, and controlled theatrical environments. Before carrying it in public as an actual walking cane, you should check your specific state and local laws; some areas ban sword canes outright, others restrict concealed weapons in public spaces even if they’re part of a costume.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

On the federal level in the U.S., automatic knives (true switchblades and OTF automatics) are mainly regulated under the Federal Switchblade Act, which restricts interstate commerce and mailing but doesn’t outright ban ownership. Day-to-day legality—owning, carrying, and transporting an automatic knife—comes down to state and sometimes city law. Some states now allow automatic knives for everyday carry with blade-length limits; others heavily restrict or ban them.

This particular product is not an automatic knife. It’s a sword cane with a manually accessed, unsharpened blade concealed behind a threaded lock. Still, the same rule holds: check your local laws before carrying any concealed blade in public, whether it’s a cane sword, switchblade, or OTF.

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

Collectors draw hard lines here, and they’re right to:

  • Automatic knife – Any knife where a spring-driven blade deploys from a closed position when you press a button, lever, or switch. The blade swings or shoots open under stored tension.
  • OTF (out-the-front) – A specific type of automatic knife where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle, instead of pivoting from the side. Can be single-action (button to deploy, manual retraction) or double-action (button both ways).
  • Switchblade – In common U.S. legal language, this is effectively the same category as an automatic knife: a blade that opens automatically by hand pressure on a button, spring, or other device in the handle.

The Gilded Orb Court-Style Sword Cane is none of those. There is no automatic deployment whatsoever—just a threaded joint you unscrew to reveal a concealed, unsharpened sword-style blade.

What makes this sword cane worth buying?

For a buyer who lives and breathes steel and mechanisms, this piece earns its keep in a different column: aesthetics, presence, and how well it sells the story. The gold-relief handle and orb pommel give you an immediate high-status silhouette; the black shaft and brass ring keep it from looking like a costume store throwaway. The threaded lock mechanism means the handle and cane stay together like a proper walking cane until you deliberately break them apart.

If you’re curating a wall, display case, or costume rack where style matters more than edge hardness and cutting performance, this sword cane pulls its weight. It’s made to be seen, handled, and talked about—exactly what you want from a theatrical, court-style piece.

For Collectors Who Know Exactly What They’re Buying

This sword cane is not an EDC automatic knife, not an OTF, and not a razor-edged defense tool—and that clarity is the point. It’s a visually striking, court-style concealed blade with a reliable threaded lock and a dramatic gold-and-black profile that anchors steampunk and fantasy looks effortlessly.

If your collection runs from modern automatics to historical reproductions and you want a theatrical court-piece to bridge the gap, the Gilded Orb Court-Style Sword Cane earns its spot. You’re not buying steel performance here; you’re buying presence—and you’ll know exactly why when you put it on the rack.

Blade Length (inches) 15.5
Overall Length (inches) 42.5
Theme Steam Punk
Locking Mechanism Threaded
Concealed Length (inches) 15.5
Concealment Type Cane