Street Leaf Quickfire Spring-Assisted Knife - Yellow Black
3 sold in last 24 hours
This isn’t your average gas-station folder. The Street Leaf Quickfire is a spring-assisted knife built for cannabis-culture EDC: fast thumb-stud deployment, a secure liner lock, and a 3.5" matte black clip point with partial serrations that actually cuts—boxes, cord, and whatever the day throws at you. The hex-textured yellow cannabis leaf handle gives real grip and real attitude. Pocket clip, jimping, and finger grooves make it carry-ready, not just counter candy.
Street Leaf Quickfire: Assisted Opening Knife Built for Real EDC Use
The Street Leaf Quickfire Spring-Assisted Knife - Yellow Black is what happens when cannabis culture styling lands on a genuinely functional assisted opener. Under the bold leaf graphic you’ve still got a real EDC tool: spring-assisted deployment, liner lock, and a 3.5" matte black clip point with partial serrations that’s ready for boxes, cord, and daily utility.
Spring-Assisted Action That Snaps, Not Struggles
This isn’t an automatic knife and it’s not an OTF switchblade. The Street Leaf Quickfire is a spring-assisted folding knife: you start the blade with the thumb stud, the internal spring takes over, and the knife finishes the deployment with authority. That distinction matters if you care about both mechanics and legality.
The assist on this knife is tuned for decisive, one-handed opening without feeling twitchy or unsafe in the pocket. The thumb stud gives you consistent indexing, and once you break the detent, the blade drives into lockup with a clean, audible snap. It’s the difference between a novelty piece and something you actually want to reach for when you’re working.
Clip Point, Partial Serrations: Built for Real Cutting Tasks
The 3.5" matte black clip point blade hits the sweet spot for everyday carry: long enough to be useful, compact enough to disappear in the pocket. The tip geometry gives you control for detail work, while the partial serrations chew through cord, plastic banding, and rougher material that would glaze a plain edge. If you’re the type who uses your knife on packages all week, you’ll feel the difference.
Handle Design: Cannabis Culture Meets Practical Grip
Yes, the yellow cannabis leaf is loud—and that’s the point. But the handle of this assisted opening knife is more than just graphics. The hexagonal texture, finger grooves, and spine jimping all contribute to real-world control, especially when your hands are wet or slick.
Hex Texture, Jimping, and Lock-Up Confidence
The hex-patterned panels on the handle add traction without shredding your pocket. Spine jimping gives your thumb a reliable indexing point when you’re bearing down on a cut. The liner lock engages fully behind the tang, giving you predictable lock-up instead of that vague, flexy feeling you get from cheaper folders. It’s a spring-assisted knife you can actually lean on.
Pocket Clip and Carry Profile
At 4.75" closed and about 4.6 oz, this assisted opener carries like a full-size EDC, not a dainty keychain toy. The pocket clip positions the knife where you can get to it quickly, and the overall profile sits flat enough that it doesn’t print like a brick. If you’re used to carrying modern tactical folders, this will feel familiar in hand and pocket.
Why Enthusiasts Still Care About Assisted Opening Knives
In a market obsessed with the next automatic knife for sale or the flashiest OTF, assisted opening knives occupy a smart middle ground—especially for buyers watching local laws. You get nearly automatic deployment speed with a mechanical action that still requires deliberate user input. That matters in jurisdictions where a true automatic or switchblade is more heavily restricted.
The Street Leaf Quickfire leans into that advantage. The assist is strong enough to feel satisfying to an enthusiast, but the knife still behaves like a conventional folder when you close it: no hidden buttons, no exposed sliders, just thumb stud, pivot, and spring doing their job.
Legal Reality Check: Where This Knife Fits
This is where definitions matter. A lot of buyers search for an automatic knife for sale and end up with something they can’t legally carry. The Street Leaf Quickfire is a spring-assisted folding knife, not a true automatic or OTF switchblade under most legal frameworks.
In many states, that distinction keeps assisted opening knives on the safer side of knife laws compared to fully automatic knives. But knife law is local law. Some jurisdictions treat all rapid-deployment folders similarly; others draw clear lines between assisted knives and button-activated automatics.
If you’re looking for something you can realistically carry day to day, this style of assisted opening knife is often a smarter choice than hunting for an automatic knife legal to carry and then discovering your city doesn’t agree with the internet. Always confirm your local and state regulations before carrying any knife—especially anything with a rapid deployment mechanism.
Collector Appeal: More Than Just a Novelty Leaf
From a collector’s standpoint, this piece hits a specific niche: cannabis-themed gear that still has credible mechanics. The yellow cannabis leaf against the black handle and blade gives it immediate visual impact in a tray or display case. The hex texture and silver accent dots break up the graphic and keep it from feeling like a cheap sticker job.
If you collect by theme—counterculture, lifestyle, or graphic-heavy EDC—this knife makes sense as a "bridge" piece: it’s loud enough to stand out, but the assisted action, liner lock, and working blade geometry keep it from being a pure novelty. It’s the kind of knife that sparks conversation with other enthusiasts who appreciate that you didn’t just buy the dullest tourist piece on the rack.
What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife
Are automatic knives legal?
In the United States, federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) restricts interstate commerce of automatic knives—true switchblades and many OTF automatics—but it does not outright ban ownership nationwide. The real complexity comes from state and local laws: some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few limits, others allow possession but restrict carry, and a handful still prohibit them outright.
The Street Leaf Quickfire is a spring-assisted knife, not a full automatic, which generally puts it in a different legal category than a push-button switchblade. That said, some local statutes are written broadly enough to include assisted knives. The only responsible path is this: check your specific state and city knife laws before buying or carrying anything with rapid deployment. Don’t rely on rumor or generic claims.
What's the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?
Mechanically, here’s the breakdown:
- Automatic knife / switchblade: In U.S. legal language, these terms are often interchangeable. A button, switch, or other device in the handle fully deploys the blade under spring power—no manual start from the user once the release is activated.
- OTF (out-the-front): A specific style of automatic where the blade travels linearly out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side. Many are double-action: the same switch drives the blade out and retracts it.
- Assisted opening knife (like this one): A folding knife that requires you to start the opening manually—typically with a thumb stud or flipper tab—before an internal spring assists and completes deployment. Legally and mechanically, it’s distinct from a true automatic knife.
The Street Leaf Quickfire sits firmly in that third category: assisted opening, side-folding, thumb-stud deployed, and liner-lock secured.
What makes this assisted opening knife worth buying?
If you’re an enthusiast or a collector, three things separate this knife from the usual novelty crowd:
- Action: The spring assist is tuned to snap decisively into lockup without feeling sloppy or underpowered. It behaves like a proper assisted opener, not a lazy pivot.
- Blade geometry: A 3.5" matte black clip point with partial serrations gives you both slicing ability and aggressive bite on rough materials—something that actually matters in daily EDC tasks.
- Design cohesion: The cannabis leaf theme is loud, but the hex texture, jimping, and ergonomic shaping mean it still functions like a real-working pocket knife, not just shelf art.
For someone who knows their gear, this is the cannabis-themed assisted opener you buy when you still actually care how the knife cuts.
For Enthusiasts Who Choose Mechanics First
If your instinct is to judge a knife by its pivot, its lockup, and how the blade geometry will actually perform, the Street Leaf Quickfire Spring-Assisted Knife - Yellow Black will make more sense to you than the usual novelty clutter. It’s a lifestyle-forward assisted opening knife that still respects the fundamentals: reliable spring assist, usable edge, and a handle you can actually work with.
Whether you’re filling out a theme collection or just want a loud, cannabis-styled folder that can still pull real EDC duty, this is the one that won’t embarrass you in front of other knife people.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.5 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8.25 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 4.75 |
| Weight (oz.) | 4.62 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Plastic |
| Theme | Marijuana Leaf |
| Safety | Liner Lock |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Spring-assisted |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |