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Marble Quillon Classic Stiletto Automatic Knife - White

Price:

8.95


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Marble Glide Classic Stiletto Automatic Knife - White

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This automatic knife for sale is a classic Italian-style stiletto done in crisp black-and-white. A 3.5" needle-point blade snaps out via push-button with a positive, no-nonsense kick, backed by a slide safety to lock things down when pocketed or displayed. The white marbleized handle with polished bolsters and gold-tone hardware gives it true showpiece appeal. At 9.625" overall, it’s long, lean, and unapologetically stiletto—built for the collector who actually cares how an automatic is put together.

8.95 8.95 USD 8.95

GF6055WT

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • 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 Knife for Sale with True Stiletto DNA

When you buy an automatic knife, you’re not just buying a cutting tool—you’re buying a mechanism and a silhouette. This Marble Glide Classic Stiletto Automatic Knife - White is built around that unmistakable Italian-style profile: long, slim, and unapologetically needle-pointed. The black blade, white marbleized handle, and polished bolsters give it the look of a classic switchblade from across the room, while the modern push-button automatic mechanism keeps it honest in hand.

Overall length is 9.625", with a 3.5" spear/needle-point blade and a 5.5" closed length. At 4.4 oz, it has just enough weight to feel substantial without turning your pocket into an anchor. This is a display-friendly automatic knife with enough mechanical integrity to satisfy an enthusiast who actually cares how the action feels.

Why This Automatic Knife for Sale Feels Right in the Hand

The appeal here isn’t subtle: you press the button, and that blade snaps out with a decisive, classic stiletto attitude. The automatic deployment is powered by an internal coil spring, tuned for a clean, linear swing rather than a lazy arc. You’re not fighting friction points or a gritty pivot—the action comes out fast, seats solid, and doesn’t rattle like a bargain-bin novelty piece.

The guard-style quillons and the long, straight handle give your hand a consistent, repeatable grip. This matters on a knife like this because a stiletto is more about point control than brute-force cutting. The balance point sits back into the handle, which is exactly where you want it for a needle-point blade designed to index quickly and precisely.

Action, Safety, and Real-World Handling

The mechanism is a classic side-opening automatic, not an OTF. You’ve got a prominent push-button on the handle that fires the blade, and a slide safety that physically blocks the button when you don’t want any surprises. That extra safety layer is exactly what separates a carryable automatic from a desk toy.

No pocket clip, and that’s intentional for this style. Traditional Italian stilettos rode loose in the pocket or in a sheath, and the clean lines of the marbleized handle stay unbroken by hardware. If you’re looking for a deep-carry EDC workhorse, you know this isn’t that. If you’re looking for a classic automatic with the right visual and mechanical cues, you’re in the right aisle.

Blade Geometry: Needle-Point with Purpose

The black, glossy spear/needle-point blade is built for penetration and detail work more than heavy prying or abuse. You get a long, straight edge and a pin-point tip that will reward careful use and punish stupidity—exactly as it should. The fuller and decorative holes aren’t just aesthetic throwbacks; they nod to the traditional stiletto style that collectors chase, while trimming a touch of weight from the long, narrow blade.

Collector-Grade Style in an Automatic Knife for Sale

The white marbleized handle scales are what sell this as a collector piece before you ever hit the button. That swirl pattern, framed by polished silver-tone bolsters and capped pommel, gives you that vintage-counter-display look you see at old-school knife shops and European flea markets. The gold-tone pins and hardware add one more layer of contrast that pops against the black blade.

This isn’t trying to be a tactical beater. It’s leaning into what a classic switchblade-style stiletto should look like: long, dramatic, and just a bit theatrical. But the difference between this and a wall-hanger is that the action, safety, and build actually hold up to being cycled—again and again—without turning sloppy after a weekend of fidgeting.

Display, Rotation, and Collection Fit

In a collector’s rotation, this automatic knife sits squarely in the “classic Italian-style stiletto” slot. The black-and-white contrast makes it a natural centerpiece in a tray or shadow box, especially if you’re pairing it with darker handled autos or OTF knives. It complements, rather than competes with, your modern tactical autos and double-action OTFs.

For a first automatic knife buyer, it scratches the itch that probably got you interested in autos in the first place: that old-school switchblade presence with modern reliability. For a veteran collector, it’s a clean, affordable way to round out the traditional side-opener segment of the collection without hunting vintage originals.

Mechanics, Steel, and Realistic Use Expectations

Let’s be blunt: this isn’t a boutique super-steel automatic, and it doesn’t pretend to be. The blade uses a standard stainless steel suited to light cutting, occasional carry, and constant deployment without demanding a stones-and-strops routine every weekend. Edge retention is adequate for package duty, light utility, and show-and-tell sessions; corrosion resistance is sufficient for normal use if you’re not abusing it in salt water or leaving it in a glovebox for years.

The engineering focus here is on the action, lockup, and safety. The push-button release engages a reliable internal spring, and the lockup is what you want on a side-opening stiletto at this price point: firm enough to feel secure, without the dangerous flex you sometimes see in lower-grade imports. The slide lock is simple and effective—no weird detents, no confusing half-lock states. Up is safe, down is live. Easy.

Is This the Best Automatic Knife for EDC?

If your definition of “best automatic knife for EDC” is something you’ll baton through pallet straps and throw into mud, look elsewhere. If your EDC reality is opening boxes, cutting cord, and occasionally enjoying the satisfaction of a classic automatic deployment at the end of the day, this stiletto earns its pocket time.

At 4.4 oz and 5.5" closed, it rides larger than a compact modern folder, but that’s part of the charm. You carry this because you like the feel of a full-length stiletto in hand, not because you’re counting grams.

Legal Context: Carrying an Automatic Knife the Right Way

Any time you buy an automatic knife, legal context matters as much as blade shape. In the United States, federal law (notably the Federal Switchblade Act) restricts interstate commerce of automatic knives and switchblades in specific ways, but it does not create a single nationwide rule for personal possession or carry. That’s handled at the state (and often city or county) level.

Some states largely allow automatic knife carry; others restrict blade length, limit carry to one-hand-disabled users, or ban switchblades and automatic knives outright. A classic stiletto-style automatic like this may be treated more strictly than a manual or assisted folder where you live. Before you clip—or pocket—any automatic knife, check your current state and local laws, including any city ordinances. Laws change, and “I didn’t know” doesn’t work as a defense.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., automatic knife legality is a patchwork. Federally, automatic knives and switchblades are regulated mainly in terms of interstate sale, import, and shipment, especially across state lines and into certain federal or territorial jurisdictions. But whether you can own or carry an automatic knife—stiletto, OTF, or otherwise—depends almost entirely on your state and local laws.

Some states allow automatic knives with few restrictions; others set blade-length limits, restrict carry to specific professions or one-armed individuals, or ban them altogether. City-level rules can be stricter than state law. The only responsible move is to verify up-to-date statutes where you live before you carry. This description isn’t legal advice; it’s your job to confirm what’s allowed in your jurisdiction.

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

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any folding knife where the blade deploys via an internal spring when you press a button, lever, or hidden actuator. This Marble Glide is a side-opening automatic: the blade pivots out from the side like a traditional folder, but the spring does the work once you hit the button.

An OTF (out-the-front) automatic sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, either with a single-action (fires only, manual reset) or double-action (fires and retracts via the same sliding control) mechanism. A switchblade is the older, popular term—especially in law—most often referring to automatic knives in general, including stilettos like this. Enthusiasts tend to use “automatic,” then specify side-opener or OTF for clarity.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

This automatic knife is worth buying if you value classic stiletto lines and a clean, confident deployment over marketing hype. You’re getting a true push-button automatic with a reliable safety, a long needle-point blade that looks the part, and a marbleized white handle with enough visual presence to stand out in any collection tray.

It fills a very specific niche: a traditional Italian-style automatic stiletto for enthusiasts who appreciate the mechanics and want that vintage look without paying vintage-collector prices or worrying about cycling the action. If you care about how a side-opener feels when it fires—and you like your knives with a bit of drama—this one earns its slot.

For Enthusiasts Who Buy an Automatic Knife with Intent

This isn’t a knife for someone who just wants “a cool switchblade.” It’s for the buyer who knows why a side-opening automatic stiletto feels different from an OTF, who understands that a slide safety is non-negotiable in a pocketable auto, and who appreciates the old-world styling wrapped around modern reliability. If that sounds like you, this is the automatic knife for sale that fits your hand, your collection, and your mindset.

Blade Length (inches) 3.5
Overall Length (inches) 9.625
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 4.4
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Needle Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Button Type Push button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Slide lock
Pocket Clip No