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Crimson Crest Quick-Deploy Spring Assisted Pocket Knife - Red Emblem

Price:

12.99


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Crimson Crest Anime-Inspired Spring Assisted Knife - White Handle

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/2520/image_1920?unique=7b63691

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This spring assisted pocket knife brings anime styling into real Texas everyday carry. A 4-inch two-tone clip point blade snaps open with a flipper and thumb stud, locking solid with a liner lock. The white handle with black inlays and red crest emblem gives it that character-inspired look without turning it into a toy. It rides deep with a pocket clip and works like any honest assisted opening knife should—clean, quick, and ready for a collector who knows the difference between assisted, automatic, and OTF.

12.99 12.99 USD 12.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Material Grass Cutter
Theme Anime
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted

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Crimson Crest Spring Assisted Pocket Knife for Texas EDC

This is a spring assisted pocket knife first, anime nod second. The Crimson Crest Anime-Inspired Spring Assisted Knife keeps its priorities straight: a 4-inch clip point blade, spring-assisted opening, and a solid liner lock you can trust. The white handle with black stripes and a red crest emblem gives it that clean anime look, but underneath the styling it behaves like a proper assisted opening EDC folder, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade.

How This Spring Assisted Pocket Knife Actually Works

A Texas collector will feel the difference the moment the spring engages. This is a side-opening spring assisted knife: you start the motion with the flipper tab or thumb stud, the internal spring takes over, and the blade snaps into lockup. It’s still a folding pocket knife, not a true automatic knife or out-the-front (OTF) knife. With a liner lock, two-tone clip point blade, and practical 5-inch closed length, it carries like a normal pocket knife but opens with that quick, confident assist you want when you’re working one-handed.

Assisted Opening vs Automatic vs OTF in Plain Terms

An assisted opening knife like this Crimson Crest needs your nudge to get started; the spring just finishes the job. An automatic knife, often called a switchblade, fires the blade with a button or switch and doesn’t require you to start the blade manually. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on a track. This Crimson Crest is firmly in the assisted camp: side-opening, manual start, spring finish, secure liner lock.

EDC-Friendly Size and Hardware

At 4 inches of steel with a plain edge and clip point profile, the blade is built for everyday cutting—boxes, cord, light utility—without pretending to be a combat piece. The deep-carry pocket clip keeps it low-key in your jeans, and the exposed liner with jimping gives your thumb traction when you bear down on a cut. It’s an EDC knife with just enough character to stand out without getting in the way.

Anime-Inspired Design, Texas-Ready Utility

The anime influence shows up in the handle: white scales, black longitudinal inlays, and that red crest emblem that looks like it walked off a character’s shoulder armor. For Texas buyers who appreciate Japanese pop culture but still want a serious tool, this is that middle ground. The design reads clean, not cartoonish. You get anime styling on an assisted opening pocket knife that still feels at home in a Texas glove box, ranch truck, or office drawer.

Minimalist Character Styling

The Crest is the focal point—simple, bold, circular. The parallel black stripes frame it, pulling your eye from emblem to blade. The two-tone finish mirrors that same contrast: darker upper section, silver cutting edge. That visual rhythm is what gives the knife its anime personality without needing logos, faces, or flashy graphics. Collectors who like character-inspired gear will recognize the motif; everyone else just sees a sharp-looking pocket knife.

Why Texas Collectors Appreciate This Mechanism

Texas collectors who already own OTF knives and automatic switchblades know there’s a place for a spring assisted knife in the same drawer. It’s simpler mechanically than many double-action OTF knives, less attention-grabbing than a button-fired automatic knife, and still offers that crisp, fast deployment. For anyone building out a full spread of mechanisms—manual, assisted, automatic, and OTF—this Crimson Crest fills the anime-styled assisted slot nicely.

Texas Carry Reality: Assisted Opening Knife in a Knife-Friendly State

Texas law is friendly to knives, including automatic knives, OTF knives, and traditional switchblades, with the main concern being blade length when you’re in certain locations. This Crimson Crest assisted opening pocket knife sits in a comfortable everyday category: a folding knife with a 4-inch blade that rides clipped in your pocket. It doesn’t have a firing button like a classic automatic or switchblade, and it doesn’t shoot out the front like an OTF knife, which makes it an easy everyday choice for Texas carry where local rules allow.

On the job site, around the shop, or running weekend errands, this kind of assisted knife doesn’t draw undue attention but still gives you fast access when you actually need to cut something. Texas buyers who know their knife laws and mechanisms can appreciate that balance—fast like an automatic knife, but living in that assisted opening pocket knife lane.

Collector Value: Where This Assisted Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

In a serious Texas knife collection, you’re not just stacking blades—you’re curating mechanisms, themes, and stories. The Crimson Crest’s story is clean: anime-inspired styling on a practical spring assisted pocket knife. It’s not trying to pass as a switchblade. It’s not pretending to be an OTF knife. It knows what it is and does that well. For a collector, this becomes your go-to example when someone asks about assisted opening knives with pop culture flavor that still function as real tools.

Next to your automatic knives and OTF knives, it shows how assisted opening tech can share space with more aggressive mechanisms while staying approachable and affordable. The Grass Cutter-style handle, the red emblem, and the two-tone blade finish all give it shelf presence, but the steel blade and solid lockup make sure it earns its keep when it leaves the display case.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Pocket Knives

Is a spring assisted pocket knife like this the same as an automatic knife or OTF switchblade?

No, and that distinction matters. A spring assisted pocket knife requires you to start the blade open with a thumb stud or flipper; the spring only completes the motion. An automatic knife or traditional switchblade uses a button or switch to fire the blade from a closed position, with no manual start. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle rather than swinging from the side. The Crimson Crest is a side-opening assisted knife, not a button-fired automatic and not an OTF switchblade.

Are assisted opening knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas is generally very permissive with knives, including automatic and OTF knives, but you still need to respect blade length restrictions and prohibited locations. This Crimson Crest sits in the assisted opening category, which Texas buyers often treat similarly to other folding pocket knives for day-to-day carry where allowed. If you’re unsure, check current Texas statutes and any local rules, but mechanism-wise, this assisted knife is typically seen as a practical EDC choice rather than a restricted switchblade.

Why would a collector choose this assisted knife over another anime-themed blade?

Because the Crimson Crest doesn’t sacrifice mechanism for theme. You’re getting a true spring assisted opening system with both flipper and thumb stud, a liner lock that stays put, and a two-tone clip point blade sized right for everyday use. The anime influence is in the red crest emblem and color blocking, not in fragile gimmicks. For a Texas collector who already owns automatics, OTF knives, and classic switchblades, this gives you a themed assisted knife that’s still built to be carried and used.

For Texas Collectors Who Know Their Mechanisms

The Crimson Crest Anime-Inspired Spring Assisted Knife belongs in the pocket of someone who can tell an assisted opening knife from an automatic knife, and an OTF from a side-opening switchblade, without blinking. It’s a clean, character-influenced EDC piece that fits right into Texas carry culture: practical, quick, and a little bit personal. If your collection already spans manuals, automatics, OTFs, and traditional switchblades, this is the assisted folder that brings anime style into that lineup without ever forgetting it’s a working knife.