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Dragon Regent Concealed Blade Sword Cane - Black & Brass

Price:

17.99


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Dragon Regent Guardian Sword Cane - Black & Brass

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1411/image_1920?unique=d20efd8

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The Dragon Regent Guardian Sword Cane hides a 17-inch steel blade inside a stately black shaft, topped with a detailed dragon head handle and brass collar. This is a concealed blade cane built for presence, not noise—steady on the floor, smooth on the draw. Texas collectors will see it for what it is: a fantasy-styled sword cane that stands by the door as easily as it stands in a display, ready to be noticed only when you choose.

17.99 17.99 USD 17.99

SWC901152

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Theme
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 17
Overall Length (inches) 38
Theme Dragon
Concealed Length (inches) 17
Concealment Type Cane

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Dragon Regent Guardian Sword Cane for Texas Collectors

The Dragon Regent Guardian Sword Cane is exactly what it looks like: a walking cane with a concealed blade hidden inside the shaft. This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade pretending to be something else. It’s a fixed steel blade riding inside a straight black cane, topped with a sculpted dragon head handle and framed by a brass collar that tells you it was meant to be seen—eventually.

Texas buyers who know their mechanisms will clock it right away. No springs, no button-fired action, no sliding OTF track. Just a steady 17-inch blade drawn straight from the cane when you’re ready, and fully concealed when you’re not.

How a Sword Cane Differs from an Automatic Knife or Switchblade

Mechanically, a sword cane plays by very different rules than an automatic knife, OTF knife, or side-opening switchblade. With those, you’ve got spring tension, buttons, or sliders launching a blade from a handle. With this dragon sword cane, the handle and shaft are the scabbard. The blade is fixed, full-length, and drawn by hand.

Mechanism: Concealed Fixed Blade, Not Spring-Driven

When you grip the dragon head handle and separate it from the black shaft, you’re not releasing a switchblade. You’re unsheathing a straight, slim 17-inch steel blade concealed inside the cane. No automatic deployment, no OTF-style straight-out-the-front action, no assisted opening. That distinction matters in Texas, where automatic knife and switchblade laws are written with spring-loaded pocket blades in mind, not canes hiding a sword.

For collectors who already own OTF knives and side-opening automatics, this piece sits in a different lane entirely. It’s closer to a walking-length dagger with a built-in scabbard than any pocketable automatic knife.

Texas Context: Sword Cane Carry and Collector Reality

Texas law has loosened up considerably on knives and blades, but there are still lines around where and how you carry. A sword cane is best treated like any other large concealed blade: know the difference between displaying it at home, transporting it responsibly, and assuming it’s just another everyday walking stick.

Home Display vs. Public Carry in Texas

In the home, this dragon sword cane is pure collector value—no different than mounting an OTF knife, automatic knife, or classic switchblade in a glass case. The dragon head handle and brass collar make it a natural by-the-door piece or corner display in a Texas den or office.

Outside the house, treat it with the same respect you’d give a long fixed blade. Texas is knife-friendly, but certain locations and situations don’t care whether it’s a sword cane, an OTF knife, or a side-opening automatic—all they see is a weapon. If you’re unsure, check current Texas weapons statutes and local rules before assuming a concealed blade cane is welcome everywhere.

Design Details Texas Collectors Notice

Plenty of novelty sword canes look loud and flimsy. The Dragon Regent Guardian Sword Cane leans the other way: understated shaft, ornate top, clean draw.

Dragon Head Handle and Brass Collar

The sculpted dragon head is where the fantasy lives—open jaws, scaled texture, and an antique-style metallic finish that reads more heirloom than costume. The brass-colored collar between handle and shaft breaks up the black and gives the piece a "regent" feel, like something that could lean in a study next to old leather and framed photos.

That collar isn’t just decoration; it also visually marks where the blade and sheath separate, so the draw feels intuitive in the hand, not like you’re guessing where to pull.

Black Cane Shaft and Concealed Steel Blade

The straight black shaft stays simple on purpose. No loud graphics, no cheap gloss. It finishes in a black rubber tip for floor traction, so it can stand and move like a cane when you need it to. Inside, the 17-inch steel blade sits concealed along the full length of the shaft, ready for a straight, confident draw.

For a Texas buyer who already owns OTF knives and automatic knives for pocket carry, this fills a different role: more display, more conversation piece, less day-to-day tool. It’s a walking-length blade dressed like a gentleman’s cane with a dragon’s attitude.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Sword Canes

Is a sword cane the same as an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

No, and that’s the point. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and button or lever to fire the blade out of the handle. An OTF knife pushes the blade straight out the front by sliding or triggering a mechanism. This dragon sword cane does none of that. The blade is fixed and fully housed inside the cane shaft. You draw it by pulling the dragon handle away from the black cane—more like unsheathing a short sword than opening a knife.

So while they all live in the edged-weapon family, this is a concealed blade cane first, not a switchblade or OTF by any honest mechanical definition.

Are sword canes legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas law has become much more permissive about knives and large blades in recent years, and ownership of a sword cane for display at home is generally not an issue. Public carry is where you need to slow down and read the current statutes. Locations that restrict knives, switchblades, or other weapons can treat a sword cane the same way, regardless of the dragon handle and walking-stick look.

If you plan to carry beyond your property, check up-to-date Texas law for "location-restricted" blades, be honest about blade length, and don’t assume a concealed blade cane will be treated more gently than a visible fixed blade.

Who does this sword cane really suit: user or collector?

This dragon sword cane is built with the collector in mind first. If your drawer already holds an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic knife, and maybe an old-school switchblade, this is the piece that stands instead of lies flat. It brings fantasy styling into a functional walking cane form, with a concealed blade that feels composed when drawn and composed when left by the door.

Retailers get a display magnet that pulls eyes from across the room. Texas collectors get a conversation piece that bridges cane, sword, and fantasy dragon theme without pretending to be an everyday pocket tool.

Why This Dragon Sword Cane Belongs in a Texas Collection

Every serious Texas collector eventually reaches the point where one more automatic knife or OTF knife doesn’t move the needle. This is where a sword cane like the Dragon Regent Guardian earns its keep. It doesn’t compete with your switchblades and autos; it changes the silhouette of your collection altogether.

You get a concealed blade cane with a 17-inch steel sword inside, a regal dragon watching from the handle, and a black-and-brass profile that feels at home in a Texas study, game room, or storefront display. It stands quietly until you decide otherwise. For someone who knows their mechanisms and cares about the story behind each piece, that’s exactly the kind of edge that matters.