Skip to Content
Serpent’s Balance Stage-Ready Belly Dancing Sword - Wood & Brass

Price:

36.71


Winged Crusader Dual-Blade Spring Assisted Knife - USA Flag
Winged Crusader Dual-Blade Spring Assisted Knife - USA Flag
7.07 7.07
Shadow Twins Dual-Length Sword Set - Black/Silver
Shadow Twins Dual-Length Sword Set - Black/Silver
14.45 14.45

Serpent’s Arc Performance Belly Dancing Sword - Wood & Brass

https://www.automaticknivesforsale.com/web/image/product.template/6486/image_1920?unique=f593186

12 sold in last 24 hours

This belly dancing sword is built for performers who take balance seriously. The 27-inch scimitar-style blade, full tang, and wood-and-brass hilt give you predictable weight and clean control across head, hip, and hand work. At 34 inches overall with a curved leather sheath, it reads clearly from the stage without feeling clumsy in motion. If you want a prop that behaves like a real sword but is tuned for choreography, this one earns its place in your case.

36.71 36.71 USD 36.71

SW901148

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Serpent’s Arc Performance Belly Dancing Sword - Built for Real Stage Control

This isn’t a wall-hanger with a belly dancing label slapped on it. The Serpent’s Arc Performance Belly Dancing Sword is a full-tang, scimitar-inspired stage blade built for dancers who actually balance steel on their heads, hips, and hands. The 27-inch curved blade, 34-inch overall length, and wood-and-brass hilt create a predictable, honest balance you can feel the second you lift it.

Why This Belly Dancing Sword Stays Put When You Move

What separates a true belly dancing sword from a decorative scimitar is balance and behavior, not just looks. This sword’s long, single-edged curved blade works with the solid wood handle and brass guard and pommel to keep weight centered where a performer needs it—low and predictable, not tip-heavy and twitchy.

The full-tang construction means the steel runs through the entire handle, pinned securely by brass. That’s not just a durability box checked; it’s what makes the sword feel like a single piece instead of a blade glued to a stick. When you place it on your head for slow rotations or lean it onto your hip for controlled isolations, that unified mass is what keeps it from suddenly rolling out of line.

Curved Profile Tuned for Performance Flow

The 27-inch scimitar-style curve isn’t an accident. That arc does three important things for a performance sword:

  • Creates a natural resting line across the head or hip so you’re not fighting a straight blade trying to wander.
  • Enhances stage presence by catching light along the satin-finished curve, so the audience actually sees the steel move.
  • Improves control in hand as you transition from balancing to flourishes or slow, controlled spins.

Wood & Brass Handle That Works Under Stage Conditions

The warm brown wooden handle and brass guard and pommel aren’t just traditional—they’re practical. Wood gives you a comfortable, dry-feeling grip when the lights get hot and sweat shows up. The straight brass crossguard gives your hand a hard reference point, especially useful when you pick the sword up or set it down in the dark just offstage.

The brass pommel at the rear adds counterweight, helping bring the balance point back toward your hand and head. That’s critical for dancers who don’t want a blade that nose-dives the moment they tilt or roll. Instead, this sword delivers a calmer, more stable response to subtle posture changes.

A Performance Sword Designed for Real-World Use

Plenty of swords look good in photos and turn into problems the moment you step onto a stage. This piece was clearly built with working dancers in mind.

  • 34-inch overall length reads clearly across a room without feeling like a pole.
  • Satin blade finish throws clean, controlled reflections instead of blinding hot spots under stage lights.
  • Minimalist, unetched blade keeps the visuals about silhouette and motion, not busy engraving that gets lost at distance.
  • Curved leather sheath lets you transport and store the sword without knocking the edge around in a straight, ill-fitting scabbard.

Leather Sheath Built for Transport, Not a Costume Afterthought

The brown leather sheath tracks the full curve of the blade and includes a belt loop and hanging strap. For working performers, that matters. You can secure the sword to your belt or costume backstage, move through crowded hallways or festival grounds, and know the blade is covered and contained. When you step out, the sheath comes off cleanly, but does its main job: protecting the steel and you between sets.

Collector Appeal: A Stage-Ready Belly Dancing Sword with Honest Construction

For collectors, the value here is straightforward: this is a performance-focused, full-length belly dancing sword with real-world construction choices instead of fantasy fluff. The full tang, brass hardware, pinned wooden scales, and correctly curved leather sheath put it in the category of functional performance prop, not costume-store toy.

It pairs well with Middle Eastern, North African, and fusion dance themes and sits comfortably next to traditional scimitars in a collection. The clean blade profile—no stamps, no gaudy etching—also makes it a solid base for custom engraving if you want to personalize it for a troupe, solo performer, or show.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

On U.S. federal level, automatic knives (often called switchblades in law) are regulated mainly for interstate commerce—federal law restricts shipping automatic knives across state lines except for certain exemptions (military, law enforcement, and some occupational uses). Day-to-day carry and possession, however, is governed by state and local law. Some states allow automatic knife carry with few or no restrictions, some limit blade length, and others prohibit carry or sale outright. Before you buy or carry any automatic knife, check your specific state and city statutes; don’t rely on generic advice or what’s allowed somewhere else.

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

“Automatic knife” is the broad technical term for a knife whose blade deploys from the closed position using an internal spring when you press a button, lever, or similar control on the handle. An OTF (out-the-front) knife is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle, either single-action (needs manual retraction) or double-action (spring-powered both out and back). “Switchblade” is mostly legal and colloquial language for side-opening automatic knives—blades that pivot out from the side of the handle under spring tension when activated. All OTFs and side-openers are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTFs, and enthusiasts use the terms precisely.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Applied to a dedicated automatic knife, the same factors that make a blade worth owning are always the same: reliable action, repeatable lockup, and honest materials. Enthusiasts look for an automatic whose button or trigger geometry allows positive, intentional deployment without accidental firings, a spring that cycles with authority but not harshness, and a blade steel that holds an edge instead of just looking good. Add in solid handle construction, hardware that can be serviced, and a profile that carries comfortably, and you have an automatic that earns pocket time instead of sitting in a drawer.

Where This Belly Dancing Sword Fits in a Serious Collection

If you collect blades by function as much as by form, the Serpent’s Arc Performance Belly Dancing Sword fills a specific slot: a stage-balanced, Middle Eastern-inspired scimitar built to move with a human body, not hang on a rack. The full-tang build, wood-and-brass hardware, and curved leather sheath give it the kind of honest construction that performers respect and collectors recognize.

It’s the sword you hand to a dancer and don’t have to apologize for. It behaves like real steel, looks right under lights, and brings a disciplined, performance-ready presence to both your collection and the stage.

No Specifications