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Emerald Quillon Quick-Deploy Stiletto Automatic Knife - Green Marble

Price:

13.99


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Emerald Boulevard Quillon Stiletto Automatic Knife - Green Marble

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/758/image_1920?unique=06bc13c

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This stiletto automatic knife brings boulevard style to Texas pockets. One push of the button snaps the polished spear point into place; a sliding safety keeps it quiet when it rides. Quillon guards lock in your grip, while emerald green marble scales catch every bit of light in the room. Slim, balanced, and side-opening, it carries like a favorite EDC but presents like a showcase piece—built for Texans who know the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a true stiletto.

13.99 13.99 USD 13.99

SB198GN

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Weight (oz.) 4.56
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Acrylic
Button Type Push button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Sliding
Pocket Clip Yes

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A stiletto automatic knife should be honest about what it is. This one is a classic, side-opening automatic with boulevard lines, not an OTF knife and not an assisted opener pretending to be one. You hit the push button, the polished spear point snaps out on a hinge, and the sliding safety minds its business until you tell it otherwise. In Texas terms: it looks dressy, carries clean, and works quick.

Stiletto automatic knife profile with true boulevard lines

This stiletto automatic knife leans hard into that traditional Italian-inspired shape—long, narrow spear point blade, quillon-style guards front and rear, polished bolsters framing a slim handle. The green marble acrylic scales turn heads the second a case door opens. The blade rides folded in the handle like any side-opening automatic knife or switchblade, then rotates out on command instead of driving straight out the front the way an OTF knife does.

Closed, it’s 5.25 inches of tailored profile. Open, it stretches to 9 inches with a 3.875-inch spear point that carries its point true down the centerline. It’s a stiletto in the honest sense of the word: long, lean, and built to make a statement before it makes a cut.

Mechanism story: side-opening automatic, not an OTF knife

Mechanically, this is a push-button, side-opening automatic knife. Press the round button, the spring drives the blade out on a pivot, and the lockup feels decisive. That’s a very different experience from an OTF knife, where the blade shoots straight out of the handle, and from an assisted opener, where you start the motion and the spring simply helps finish it. Here, the automatic spring does the whole job once you commit with your thumb.

Push-button deployment with sliding safety

The action is tuned for a clean snap without harsh recoil—important in a stiletto profile where your grip is naturally narrow. A sliding safety sits just above the button. Slide it up to lock the button when the knife rides in your pocket; slide it down when you’re ready to deploy. It’s the control layout Texas automatic knife users expect: simple, repeatable, no guesswork in the dark.

Quillon guards that center the hand

Front and rear quillon-style guards give your fingers a natural stop when the blade opens. That matters on a slim stiletto automatic knife, where the handle doesn’t bulk up like a tactical folder. The guards tell you where you are without looking, and they lend that classic switchblade silhouette collectors recognize, even though the mechanism and action here are firmly in the automatic knife camp.

Stiletto automatic knife features that work in Texas carry

Texas buyers don’t just want a showpiece; they want something that rides well from Amarillo to Austin. This stiletto automatic knife carries tip-down on a metal pocket clip, hugging the seam instead of printing across the pocket. At 4.56 ounces, it has enough weight to feel anchored but not so much it drags on lightweight shorts or slacks.

The polished spear point blade brings a plain edge with a clean swedge and a subtle fuller—sharp enough for everyday chores like opening feed sacks, breaking down boxes, or cutting cord, but dressed enough for Sunday boots and a sport coat. It’s not a pry bar and doesn’t pretend to be a hard-use tactical knife. It’s a refined automatic with a stiletto look that suits Texas nights as well as Texas workdays.

Texas law, automatic knives, and where this stiletto fits

Texas used to be rough territory for automatic knife and switchblade owners. That changed. As of current law, adults in Texas can own and carry an automatic knife or switchblade, and OTF knives ride under the same broad rules, with blade length and location-based carve-outs doing most of the talking. This stiletto automatic knife falls on the dressier side of that freedom.

The blade runs about 3.875 inches, which keeps it under the 5.5-inch threshold that matters in many restricted locations. It still looks like a classic switchblade to the casual eye—which means if you’re carrying it into more formal or sensitive settings, the way you present it matters as much as the letter of the law. Know your local rules, know your surroundings, and carry it like the gentleman’s automatic it is.

Stiletto automatic knife vs. OTF knife vs. assisted opener

Collectors in Texas get frustrated when every blade with a spring gets called a switchblade. This piece helps set that record straight. It’s an automatic knife first and foremost: push-button, side-opening, spring-driven deployment that takes the blade from closed to locked in one motion.

An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a thumb slide on the spine. It feels more mechanical, more modern, and often carries a double-action retraction. This stiletto automatic knife stays with the classic rotation on a pivot, giving you stronger lateral support at the hinge and those timeless lines that photograph beautifully.

Assisted openers live in the middle ground. You nudge the blade open with a stud or flipper, and a spring helps complete the arc. They’re technically manual knives with a helper spring. This Emerald Boulevard rides squarely on the automatic side of that line—no half-measures, no pre-load. Button in, blade out.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Automatic Knives

How does this stiletto automatic compare to OTF and switchblade options?

This stiletto automatic knife shares visual DNA with classic switchblades—slim handle, quillon guards, spear point blade—but its action is a modern, push-button automatic. Compared to an OTF knife, it rotates out on a hinge instead of traveling straight forward, giving you a more traditional feel and stronger side-to-side support at the pivot. If you want old-school boulevard style with current automatic performance, this lands right where those lanes cross.

Is a stiletto automatic knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, adults can legally own and carry automatic knives, including stilettos and OTF designs, with some location-based restrictions and a 5.5-inch blade length benchmark affecting certain places. This knife’s sub-4-inch blade keeps it on the friendly side of that measurement, but it’s still your job to know your specific city and venue rules. When in doubt, check the latest Texas statutes or talk to local authorities before you clip it on.

Who is this stiletto automatic knife really for—user or display collector?

Both, if you’re honest about what you need. The emerald marble scales, polished hardware, and engraved “Stiletto” script make it a natural centerpiece in a Texas collection, especially among automatic and switchblade-inspired pieces. At the same time, the pocket clip, sliding safety, and plain-edge spear point make it perfectly capable as a light-duty EDC automatic. If you like your working knives to look like they belong under glass, this one hits the sweet spot.

Why this stiletto automatic knife belongs in a Texas collection

Texas collectors know the difference between an OTF knife, a side-opening automatic, and a switchblade profile that’s more about culture than statute. This Emerald Boulevard Quillon stiletto automatic knife threads that needle. It brings the boulevard silhouette and quillon guards that made the style famous, rides on a modern automatic mechanism, and shows up in a green marble suit that doesn’t blend into any case or drawer.

If your roll already holds rough-and-ready automatics, a couple of OTF knives, and more than one plain-Jane folder, this is the dress piece that rounds out the lineup. It’s for the Texan who can explain why mechanism matters, carries accordingly, and lets the knife do the talking when the button clicks and the polished spear point snaps into the light.