Skip to Content
Frontier Heirloom Clip-Point Lockback Pocket Knife - White Bone

Price:

11.99


Stars & Stripes Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black Blade
Stars & Stripes Rapid-Deploy Spring Assisted Knife - Matte Black Blade
6.99 6.99
Shadow Arc Compact Tactical Hatchet - Black with Wood Handle
Shadow Arc Compact Tactical Hatchet - Black with Wood Handle
33.99 33.99

Frontier Trail Lockback Pocket Knife - White Bone

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7072/image_1920?unique=eee011e

5 sold in last 24 hours

This lockback pocket knife is built like it’s been riding in a Texas pocket for decades. A 4-inch stainless clip-point blade opens by nail nick and locks solid with a classic back-lock. White bone handle scales, red spacers, and polished bolsters keep it firmly in the frontier tradition, while a pocket clip and leather belt sheath give you modern carry options. From fence line to campfire, it’s the folding knife you reach for when you want work done and stories kept.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

PK116BN

Not Available For Sale

5 people are viewing this right now

  • 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
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5
Weight (oz.) 8
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Bovine Bone
Theme None
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Manual
Lock Type Lock-Back

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

Frontier Lockback Pocket Knife Built for Real Texas Use

This is a lockback pocket knife in the classic sense of the word. Manual opening with a nail nick, a 4-inch clip-point stainless blade, and that positive back-lock snap when it’s fully open. No springs, no push button, no automatic assist. Just a full-size folding knife that does its job cleanly and stays locked until you tell it otherwise.

In a world where everything gets called a switchblade or automatic knife, this one stands firmly in the traditional camp. It’s a lockback pocket knife you open yourself, and that’s exactly why a lot of Texas collectors and everyday carriers trust it.

Lockback Pocket Knife Mechanism: Simple, Strong, Proven

The heart of this knife is its lockback mechanism. When you open the blade with the nail nick, a rocker bar along the spine drops into a notch in the tang. That’s what gives you that solid click and keeps the blade from folding on your fingers. To close, you press the lock at the back of the handle and guide the blade home. No springs, no torsion bars, just honest mechanical engagement.

How It Differs from an Automatic Knife or OTF Knife

An automatic knife uses a spring and a button or lever to fire the blade open. An OTF knife (out-the-front knife) drives the blade straight out the front of the handle with a slide or switch. Both rely on internal springs. This lockback is different: you supply the motion; the lock supplies the security. That distinction matters to Texas buyers who want a folding knife that feels traditional, travels easy, and stays on the right side of more conservative workplaces and carry expectations.

Clip-Point Blade Built for Everyday Texas Chores

The 4-inch stainless clip-point blade is long enough for ranch, shop, and camp work without getting unwieldy. That fine tip handles detail cuts—cord, feed bags, cardboard—while the belly gives you enough curve for light field dressing or camp cooking duty. Stainless steel means less babying in Texas heat and sweat; wipe it down, give it a touch of oil, and it’s ready for another day.

A Lockback Pocket Knife with Frontier Bones

What catches your eye first is the handle: white bone scales with subtle grain, framed by polished metal bolsters and a metal pommel. Red spacer stripes at the transitions give it just enough color to feel custom without getting flashy. It looks like the kind of folding knife that could’ve ridden in a saddlebag on a West Texas lease and then slipped into a Sunday pocket.

Bone, Leather, and Stainless: Classic Collector Cues

Bone handle, stainless clip-point blade, and a tooled leather sheath—those three details tell collectors exactly what lane this knife runs in. This isn’t a tactical automatic or a modern OTF knife with aggressive machining. It’s a traditional lockback pocket knife with frontier styling, built for the buyer who still likes natural materials and the feel of leather on a belt.

Texas Carry Reality: Lockback Pocket Knife vs. Switchblade Concerns

In Texas, the law separates knives more by blade length and certain categories than by marketing terms. A lot of folks still worry about carrying a switchblade or automatic knife out of old habit. This lockback pocket knife sidesteps that anxiety for conservative carriers. It’s manually opened, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a push-button switchblade.

With a 4-inch blade and an overall open length of 9 inches, it fits solidly in the full-size folding knife category. The pocket clip lets you ride it in a jeans pocket from Amarillo to Brownsville, while the included brown leather sheath gives you a belt-carry option when you’re in work pants or heading out to the deer lease. As always, Texas buyers should double-check current state and local regulations, but from a mechanism standpoint, this is a traditional manual lockback, not a spring-fired automatic.

Collector Value: A Traditional Lockback Worth a Texas Slot

Most Texas collectors already own something automatic, maybe even an OTF knife they enjoy for the novelty. This lockback pocket knife earns its place for a different reason: it scratches that frontier itch. White bone, red spacers, stainless clip-point blade, leather sheath—this is the side of the drawer that smells like saddle soap and campfire, not kydex and carbon fiber.

At 5 inches closed and 8 ounces, it’s a substantial folding knife, not a dainty pocket piece. That heft in hand, along with the back-lock, gives you confidence when you’re bearing down on a cut. The design language is pure frontier: clean, functional lines, traditional materials, and no unnecessary hardware beyond a practical pocket clip.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Lockback Pocket Knives

Is a lockback pocket knife like this considered an automatic knife or switchblade?

No. A lockback pocket knife is a manual folding knife. You open the blade yourself with the nail nick; there’s no button, spring, or internal drive like you’d find in an automatic knife or OTF knife. A switchblade is a type of automatic where a button releases a spring-loaded blade. This knife simply locks open once you’ve manually deployed it, which is why collectors and everyday carriers separate it from automatic and OTF designs.

Is carrying a lockback pocket knife like this legal in Texas?

Under current Texas law, the key factors are blade length and certain restricted categories. This knife is a manual lockback pocket knife with a 4-inch blade, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a push-button switchblade. That traditional mechanism generally makes it an easier everyday carry choice than some automatic designs. Still, Texas buyers should always review the most up-to-date state statutes and any local rules before carrying, especially in schools, courthouses, or other sensitive locations.

Why add a traditional lockback if I already own an automatic knife or OTF knife?

Because they each fill a different role. Your automatic knife or OTF knife might be your quick-deploy conversation piece. A lockback pocket knife like this is your steady hand—the one you’re comfortable pulling out at the feed store, around family, or at the office without raising eyebrows. The frontier styling, bone handle, and leather sheath give it a story your other folders may not have, and collectors appreciate having a manual lockback that looks at home anywhere in Texas.

Built for the Texas Buyer Who Knows Their Knives

This lockback pocket knife doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It isn’t an automatic knife, it isn’t an OTF knife, and it doesn’t need the switchblade label to earn respect. It’s a full-size, stainless clip-point folder with bone scales and leather carry—exactly what a lot of Texans still think of when they hear the words “good pocket knife.”

If you like your collection to tell the whole Texas story—modern automatics, a sharp OTF or two, and a few honest frontier lockbacks—this white bone folder belongs in that lineup. It’s the piece you carry when you want your knife to look like it’s always been there, and like it always will be.