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Clockwork Grip Steampunk Brass Knuckles - Black Steel

Price:

6.75


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Industrial Epoch Steampunk Knuckles Paperweight - Black Steel

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This isn’t costume brass; it’s a solid black steel statement. The Industrial Epoch Steampunk Knuckles Paperweight plants 11.3 oz of matte‑black authority on your desk, with oversized one‑inch finger holes and a palm‑hugging curve that feels engineered, not decorative. At 4.75" x 2.75" and 0.5" thick, it’s compact enough to pocket yet substantial enough to anchor a workspace or collection with unapologetic industrial presence.

6.75 6.75 USD 6.75

PW300BKCL

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Industrial Epoch Steampunk Knuckles Paperweight - Black Steel

Some pieces exist to fill space. This one occupies it with intent. The Industrial Epoch Steampunk Knuckles Paperweight takes the classic brass knuckles silhouette and distills it down to pure industrial design: solid black steel, four perfect circles, and a palm line that feels like it came off a machinist’s bench, not a toy rack.

Automatic Knife For Sale? No — But It Belongs In The Same Collection

If you’re the kind of buyer who searches for an automatic knife for sale, you’re already tuned into mechanics, mass, and how metal feels in the hand. This piece taps that same instinct. You’re not here for hollow cast zinc, you’re here for something that actually has presence. At 11.3 oz, cut from a single slab of steel, this steampunk knuckle paperweight slots naturally beside your favorite OTF and automatic knives as the desk anchor of the collection.

Where a well‑built automatic snaps open with confidence, this knuckle duster answers with silent authority: weight, contour, and a geometry that’s brutally honest about what it is. No logos. No gimmicks. Just steel shaped with purpose.

Design Details That Speak To Knife And Gear Enthusiasts

Knife people notice the little things: how a spine is chamfered, how scales break an edge, how a pocket clip lands in the palm. The same level of attention shows up here.

Single-Piece Steel Construction

This isn’t a hollow casting. The body is a single-piece steel slab, cut and finished as one continuous form. That matters. One-piece construction means no seams to rattle, no joints to fail, and a density you feel the second you pick it up. It has the kind of unapologetic heft you expect from a full-steel automatic knife frame, translated into a knuckle duster profile.

Oversized One-Inch Finger Holes

The four finger holes are cut to roughly one inch in diameter with smooth inner edges. Oversized holes do two things: they improve comfort over time, and they make the fit more forgiving across different hand sizes. No sharp casting flash, no edges that bite into your fingers — just a clean, circular geometry that feels considered, not rushed.

Palm-Friendly Curved Bar

The bottom bar follows a gentle arc instead of a dead-straight profile. That curve distributes pressure across the palm, the same way a well-contoured knife handle spreads load over the heel of your hand. Even as a desk piece or display knuckle, that ergonomics-first approach is what separates real gear from novelty metal.

Where This Belongs In A Serious Collection

If your shelves already carry OTFs, autos, and the occasional legal-to-carry switchblade, this steampunk brass knuckles paperweight is the visual counterweight. The matte black finish plays perfectly against bead-blasted blades, stonewashed clips, and black-coated automatics. It reads like a component — something that could have been milled out of the same billet as your favorite tactical folder.

The style lands in that stripped-down steampunk zone: industrial, minimal, and just enough attitude to hold its own next to high-end steel. No gears glued on, no fake patina — the steampunk comes from the form and material, not cosplay decoration.

Mechanics Without Moving Parts

Automatic knife people care about action — how fast, how clean, how repeatable. This piece is the opposite end of that spectrum: no springs, no buttons, just geometry and mass. But the same mechanical brain that obsesses over lockup and deployment will appreciate what’s going on here.

  • Weight Distribution: At 4.75" by 2.75" and 0.5" thick, the steel mass is centered across the four holes and palm bar. It feels balanced when you pick it up from any side, the way a well-designed knife feels neutral in different grips.
  • Edge Treatment: The outer edges and inner rings are deburred and smoothed. No casting seams, no sharp chatter marks. That’s the difference between a quick-and-dirty replica and a piece that feels finished.
  • Surface Finish: The matte black finish knocks down reflections and gives it that "tool, not trinket" vibe. It’s closer to a blackwashed or coated blade finish than a cheap spray coat.

Legal Context: Display-Ready, Law-Aware

Let’s talk about reality. Brass knuckles and metal knuckle dusters sit in a legal gray-to-black area in a lot of jurisdictions. Unlike an automatic knife for sale, where you can usually navigate carry laws by state and blade length, knuckles are often more tightly regulated.

In many U.S. states, simple possession of metal knuckles can be restricted, banned, or treated differently depending on whether they’re carried, concealed, or simply owned as a collectible or paperweight. Some states have recently relaxed old knuckle laws; others still treat them as prohibited weapons. Federal law doesn’t specifically target brass knuckles the way it addresses interstate commerce of automatic knives and switchblades, but state and local codes absolutely do.

Translation: this piece is best treated as a desk display, paperweight, or collection item, and you should check your state and local laws before carrying or displaying it outside your home or office. If you’re already tuned into the "automatic knife legal to carry" discussion, apply that same diligence here.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing An Automatic Knife

Even though this is a brass knuckles paperweight, the same buyers who search out an automatic knife for sale, compare OTF vs side-opening autos, and debate switchblade laws are the ones drawn to this kind of industrial collectible. So let’s hit the big questions you already ask in the automatic world.

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knives (what federal law and many states call "switchblades") are regulated primarily at the state level, with a federal overlay that controls interstate commerce and shipping. Federally, automatic knives can be manufactured, owned, and sold, but shipping across state lines to consumers is restricted under the Federal Switchblade Act, with some exemptions for military, law enforcement, and certain uses.

State laws are all over the map. Some states fully allow ownership and carry of automatic knives with few restrictions. Others allow ownership but limit concealed carry, blade length, or how and where you can carry them. A few still treat switchblades as prohibited weapons. If you’re looking to buy automatic knife models for everyday carry, you should always check current state and local statutes, not just assume they follow federal rules.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife that opens its blade by pressing a button, switch, or similar device in the handle, with a spring or stored energy deploying the blade. Most side-opening autos fall into this category.

An OTF knife (out-the-front) is a specific kind of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle. Double-action OTFs use the same control to fire and retract the blade; single-action OTFs spring the blade out and require manual retraction.

"Switchblade" is the traditional legal term used in many statutes for what enthusiasts now usually call automatic knives. Legally, switchblade and automatic are often the same thing; mechanically, the enthusiast world uses "automatic" and then further breaks it down into OTF, side-opening, single-action, and double-action designs.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Applied to this product: what makes this brass knuckles paperweight worth buying for someone who usually spends time and money on autos and OTFs?

  • Honest Materials: Solid steel, not pot metal. The same mindset that makes you care about blade steel composition makes you appreciate real weight here.
  • Clean Geometry: Oversized one-inch holes, faceted top ridge, palm curve — it presents like a purpose-built tool, not novelty junk.
  • Collection Presence: It visually anchors a tray of automatics and OTFs, giving your blades a companion piece that speaks the same industrial language.
  • Finish And Form: Matte black steel looks right next to black-coated blades, dark stonewash, and tactical hardware.

If you’re building a collection where every piece says something about mechanics, mass, and material, this earns its spot without pretending to be more than it is.

For Enthusiasts Who Care About Steel, Shape, And Story

You came here looking to buy automatic knife gear, OTFs, or serious switchblade-grade hardware. Along the way, you found a brass knuckles paperweight that speaks the same language: minimal, industrial, unapologetically metal. That’s not an accident.

The Industrial Epoch Steampunk Knuckles Paperweight - Black Steel is for the collector who knows that what sits next to the knives matters almost as much as the blades themselves. It’s the desk piece that quietly tells anyone paying attention: this is someone who understands steel, respects design, and doesn’t waste space on cheap imitations.

If that sounds like you, it’ll feel right at home in your lineup.

Weight (oz.) 11.3
Theme Steam Punk
Length (inches) 4.75
Width (inches) 2.75
Thickness (inches) 0.5
Material Steel
Color Black