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Marble Vein Dress-Ready Stiletto Automatic Knife - White Inlay

Price:

8.50


Heritage Inlay Fast-Action Stiletto Automatic Knife - Wood Overlay
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Executive Ember Gentleman's Automatic Knife - Carbon Fiber Gold
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Marble Vein Dress Stiletto Automatic Knife - White Inlay

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This automatic knife for sale is a classic dress stiletto done right: side-opening, button-fired, and purpose-built for clean, confident deployment. Press the push button and the 5-inch spear-point blade snaps into lockup, guarded by a functional flipper tab. Polished stainless steel, white marble-style inlays, safety lock, and tip-up clip make it a slim, pocketable statement piece for the enthusiast who knows the difference between novelty and a proper automatic.

8.50 8.5 USD 8.50

SB223WP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
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  • Closed Length (inches)
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  • Handle Finish
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Automatic Knife for Sale with Dress Stiletto DNA

This isn’t a novelty "switchblade" off a gas-station rack. It’s a classic side-opening automatic knife for sale built in the dress stiletto tradition: long, lean spear-point blade, polished stainless frame, and white marble-style inlays that actually belong in a pocket with a collared shirt. The mechanism is simple and honest — push-button auto with a safety — and the geometry makes sense for someone who cares about how a knife carries and deploys, not just how it looks on a thumbnail.

Why This Automatic Knife Earns a Spot in a Serious Collection

Start with the form factor. Closed at roughly 5.2 inches and opening to about 9 inches overall, this is a full-size automatic knife, not a toy. The 5-inch spear-point blade is classic stiletto: narrow profile, generous straight section for basic slicing, and a centered point that tracks exactly where you expect. It’s stainless steel, polished, and ground for clean EDC tasks, light utility, and dress carry — the jobs this style was actually made for.

The handle is polished stainless with white marble-style inlay scales, bolstered at each end to frame the inlays and reinforce the classic Italian-inspired silhouette. In hand, the slim profile carries flatter than most chunky tactical autos, and when open, the flipper tab doubles as a low-profile guard so your fingers don’t creep forward in a hard push cut.

Side-Opening Automatic Action That Actually Feels Tuned

Mechanically, this is a side-opening automatic knife, not an OTF. Press the side-mounted button and the blade is driven out of the handle on a pivot by an internal spring. The action you feel is a combination of coil spring tension and pivot tuning. When it’s done right, like here, you get a decisive snap into lockup without the gritty hesitation you see on bargain-bin autos.

The lockup is straightforward: a liner-style lock engages the tang, augmented by a sliding safety near the button. That safety matters for real-world carry. Pocket an automatic without a safety and you’re relying entirely on detent tension. With this layout, you can throw it into a waistband, suit pocket, or inside jacket without worrying about a stray press of the button waking it up prematurely.

Blade, Geometry, and Real-World Edge Use

Stainless steel at this price point is about honest utility, not spec-sheet flexing. You’re getting a corrosion-resistant blade that shrugs off pocket sweat, prints, and the occasional wet-cut without babying. Paired with the 5-inch length, that means plenty of edge to work with: opening mail and boxes, cutting cord, breaking down light packaging, or just having an elegant, precise point when you need it.

The spear-point profile is symmetrical, which collectors appreciate visually, but also functional. The centered point gives you predictable penetration, and the mostly straight edge is easy to touch up on a basic stone or ceramic rod. You don’t need to be a sharpening nerd to keep this one cutting clean.

Automatic Knives for Sale That Actually Carry Like EDC

A lot of dress stilettos are made to sit in a display case. This one is built to ride in a pocket. You’ve got a tip-up stainless pocket clip mounted along the spine, keeping the knife deep and aligned in the pocket. The slim stainless frame and narrow inlays keep the profile thin instead of blocky, which is what makes it disappear in slacks or a suit pocket far better than tactical brick autos.

At closed length, it’s right in that sweet spot where you’re getting a full grip when open but not printing like a baton in your pocket. The lanyard hole at the end of the handle is a small but smart addition: add a fob for easier retrieval or just to give it a touch of personal identity in a collection.

Collector Appeal: The Dress-Ready Automatic That Still Snaps

Collectors who live around custom shows know the value of a proper dress automatic. It has to do three things at once: look right in the hand, deploy with conviction, and not embarrass itself in basic use. This piece checks that box trio. The polished stainless, marble-style white inlay, and long, traditional stiletto lines give it immediate display appeal. The side-opening automatic action is fast and audible — that solid, mechanical click-and-lock that never really gets old.

For someone building out an automatic knife tray, this knife fills the “dress stiletto” slot without pretending to be a tactical OTF or a combat folder. It knows what it is, and that honesty plays well next to higher-end customs and production autos alike.

Action, Mechanism, and What Sets This Automatic Apart

The heart of any automatic knife is its action. On this model, the push button is placed where your thumb naturally lands in a standard saber grip. That matters. You’re not hunting for a tiny stud or awkwardly re-gripping the knife to light it off. The button stroke is short and positive; once you break the detent, the spring takes over and drives the blade to full extension.

The safety sits just off that button, a sliding switch you can thumb forward for “fire” and back to “safe.” On a real-world automatic, this is the difference between comfortable pocket carry and nervous fidgeting. It also means you can hand it to someone who’s not an automatic-knife regular and know they’re not going to accidentally deploy it while they’re just checking it out.

The pivot and blade tang engagement give you that familiar, reassuring lockup click. You’re not getting side-to-side blade wobble right out of the box. For an enthusiast, that’s non-negotiable — action without control is just noise. Here, you get both. Quietly, that’s what separates a worthwhile automatic knife for sale from the bottom shelf.

Is This Automatic Knife Legal to Carry?

Here’s where we don’t sugarcoat anything. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (including side-opening autos and OTFs) are regulated mainly for interstate commerce and shipment, not everyday pocket carry. The real legal landscape is handled at the state and sometimes local level — and it changes.

Some states now allow automatic knives for EDC with few restrictions, others limit blade length, and a few still heavily restrict possession or carry. Switchblade laws, automatic knife statutes, and OTF-specific language all vary. Before you buy automatic knife models like this for carry, you need to check your state and local laws, not just federal rules. Many serious buyers keep an eye on current "automatic knife legal to carry" updates from organizations like knife-rights advocacy groups or state code sites.

We offer this automatic knife for sale for adults who understand that owning and carrying an auto is their responsibility. If you’re adding it to a collection or keeping it as a dress piece at home, the landscape is usually less complicated. Daily pocket carry is where you absolutely confirm your local statutes.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

At the federal level in the U.S., automatic knives are primarily regulated under the Federal Switchblade Act, which governs interstate commerce, import, and shipment via certain carriers. It does not create a uniform national carry law. Actual legality of owning and carrying an automatic knife, side-opening auto, or OTF is determined by state and sometimes municipal law.

Some states allow automatic knives with no real restrictions, others limit blade length or how and where you can carry, and a handful still prohibit them or treat them as restricted weapons. Because the law changes, you should always check current state statutes and local ordinances before you buy automatic knife models for everyday carry. When in doubt, treat it as a collector piece until you know exactly what’s allowed.

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

"Automatic knife" is the broad mechanical category: a blade that opens by pressing a button, switch, or similar control, with a spring or stored energy completing the deployment. This marble dress stiletto is a side-opening automatic: the blade pivots out from the handle like a traditional folder, but under spring power, not your thumb.

OTF (out-the-front) knives are a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle. Many are double-action OTFs — the same switch both deploys and retracts the blade. A “switchblade” is largely a legal and cultural term that most statutes use to describe automatic knives in general, especially side-opening autos. Enthusiasts use the terms carefully: this piece is a side-opening automatic stiletto, not an OTF, though it absolutely lives in that switchblade legal conversation.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, you’re getting a reliable side-opening action, push-button deployment, and a functional safety — everything you actually want in an automatic you intend to carry. A 5-inch polished stainless spear-point blade gives you real edge length and utility, not just visual drama. The slim stainless frame, white marble-style inlay, and stiletto silhouette hit that dress-ready profile collectors prize when they build out a balanced automatic tray.

In short, this is a true automatic knife for sale that understands its lane: a gentleman’s dress stiletto with honest, confident action. It’s the piece you reach for when you want an auto that looks at home with a jacket, deploys with authority, and holds its own beside higher-end customs without pretending to be one.

For the Enthusiast Who Chooses the Right Automatic Knife

If you’re the buyer who can explain the difference between a side-opening automatic, an OTF, and a legal “switchblade” definition without reaching for a glossary, this knife is speaking your language. The Marble Vein Dress Stiletto Automatic Knife - White Inlay gives you a clean automatic knife for sale with real action, refined lines, and honest materials — a dress-ready auto that delivers exactly what it promises every time you hit the button.

Blade Length (inches) 5
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.2
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Stainless Steel
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Lock
Pocket Clip Yes