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Gentleman’s Reach Godfather-Length Stiletto Automatic Knife - Wood

Price:

30.99


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Gentleman’s Reach Godfather Stiletto Automatic Knife - Polished Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7125/image_1920?unique=4929688

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This godfather-length stiletto automatic knife is built for the Texan who knows exactly what he’s carrying. Press the button and the long, polished stiletto blade snaps open in classic switchblade fashion, then locks up clean. The wood handle and bright bolsters give it a gentleman’s profile, more cigar lounge than back alley. At 13 inches open, it’s a presence piece—made for the desk, the display case, or the collector who appreciates old-world style with modern automatic reliability.

30.99 30.99 USD 30.99

GF8156WD

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 5
Overall Length (inches) 13
Closed Length (inches) 7
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Stiletto
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Button
Theme Stiletto
Pocket Clip No

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What This Godfather Stiletto Automatic Knife Really Is

This is a classic godfather-length stiletto automatic knife, the kind most folks call a switchblade before they know any better. It’s not an OTF knife, and it’s not an assisted opener. It’s a side-opening automatic: press the button, the spring drives that long stiletto blade out of the handle and into lock-up in one clean motion. If you’re a Texas buyer who cares about the difference, this piece speaks your language.

Open, you’re looking at about 13 inches of old-world style. The blade is a polished, needle-like stiletto with a central spine and a plain edge, more about thrust and presence than box-cutting duty. Closed, the automatic knife rides as a slim, wood-handled rectangle with classic Italian-style bolsters and guards. It’s pure godfather silhouette, dressed up like a gentleman instead of a streetfighter.

Stiletto Automatic Knife Mechanism, Not OTF

This stiletto is a side-opening automatic knife: the blade pivots from the side like a traditional folding knife, but the work is done by a coil spring, not your wrist. Press the round button on the handle and the blade snaps out with that unmistakable switchblade attitude. No thumb stud, no flipper tab, no half-measures—this isn’t an assisted opener that just gives you a nudge. It’s a full automatic with a decisive, linear deployment.

OTF knives, by contrast, drive the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails. This godfather-style automatic doesn’t do that, and that’s part of its charm. For Texas collectors, that distinction matters: if you’re hunting a classic Italian profile, you want the side-opening switchblade style, not a modern OTF tactical. This piece delivers that traditional mechanism with a polished, display-worthy finish.

Button, Safety, and Lock-Up Details

The button sits proud on the handle where your thumb expects it. A dedicated sliding safety backs it up, so you can drop this automatic knife into a drawer or display case without worrying about an accidental fire. Once deployed, the stiletto blade locks open with a traditional rocker-style release—pull back on the lever near the guard and the blade folds closed under control. It’s a familiar pattern to anyone who’s handled classic Italian switchblades, executed here with modern fit and finish.

Steel, Wood, and Classic Hardware

The polished steel blade gives this stiletto automatic knife a bright, clean line from guard to tip. It’s made for piercing and presentation more than camp chores, and the finish reflects that. The handle wears polished wood scales with visible grain, pinned to the frame in brass, framed by bright bolsters. No pocket clip, no modern-framed aggression—just a straight, honest godfather-style automatic that looks right on a desk, in a case, or laid out with a weekend cigar.

Texas Context: Carrying a Switchblade-Style Automatic

Texas law has changed enough that automatic knives and classic switchblade patterns like this stiletto are no longer whispered about. For most Texans, owning and carrying an automatic knife is legal, but blade length and location can still matter. At roughly 13 inches overall with a five-inch blade, this godfather-length piece is better suited to home, ranch, or private property than clipped in your Sunday jeans—especially around schools, courthouses, or other restricted spots.

This isn’t a subtle EDC. It’s long, it’s obvious when opened, and it looks exactly like what it is: a movie-famous stiletto automatic knife. In a Texas glove box, on a bar at deer camp, or on a shelf in your office, it fits right in. On a city sidewalk, it’s going to draw eyes the second that blade snaps out. A smart Texas collector knows when this kind of switchblade-style presence is appropriate and when a smaller automatic or even a simple pocket knife makes more sense.

Why Collectors Want a Godfather Stiletto Automatic Knife

Automatic knives come in a lot of flavors—compact push-button autos, modern OTF knives, and work-ready assisted openers. This piece isn’t trying to compete with your everyday utility blade. It fills a different lane in a Texas collection: the classic godfather stiletto form, done with gentleman’s wood instead of plastic or horn. It’s about silhouette, sound, and story.

Press the button and the long stiletto blade snaps out into that unmistakable 13-inch profile. That’s the scene every switchblade fan carries around in the back of his mind from old cinema and paperback covers. This automatic knife captures that moment but dresses it up: polished steel, polished wood, honest bolsters, and a safety that makes it more practical to own and show. It’s a display knife that still works as a knife, built for the Texan who likes his nostalgia with real hardware, not novelty-store chrome.

Automatic Knife vs. Assisted Opener in a Texas Drawer

In a serious Texas drawer or safe, an assisted opener fills the work slot—fast enough, legal nearly everywhere, easy to explain. A modern OTF knife scratches the technical itch with rails and front-firing novelty. This godfather stiletto automatic holds the history slot. It represents the classic switchblade archetype: side-opening, long-bladed, and unapologetically dramatic. That clear role is what earns it a permanent spot for a collector who already owns more practical blades.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Automatic Knives

Is this stiletto an OTF knife, an automatic knife, or a switchblade?

This piece is a side-opening automatic knife built in the classic switchblade style. The blade pivots out from the side on a hinge when you press the button. An OTF knife, by contrast, sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on internal tracks. So in plain language: it’s an automatic, it looks and behaves like the traditional godfather switchblades you’ve seen on screen, and it is not an OTF.

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

Texas has largely relaxed its old switchblade restrictions, and automatic knives are generally legal to own. That said, blade length and location still matter. A long, five-inch stiletto automatic like this is more at home as a collection piece or property carry than as a daily pocket companion in sensitive areas. Laws change and local rules can vary, so a smart Texas buyer checks current state and local code before treating any long automatic knife as everyday carry.

Is this more for display or for everyday use?

Mechanically, this automatic knife will open quickly and lock up like any working blade, but the design tells you what it wants to be. The long, needle-like stiletto blade and godfather profile lean toward display, conversation, and collection value. If you need an everyday Texas ranch or oilfield cutter, a shorter automatic or a solid assisted opener makes more sense. This one shines on the desk, in the case, and in the hand when you want to feel that classic switchblade snap.

For the Texan Who Knows His Automatics

Owning this gentleman’s reach godfather stiletto automatic knife says you know exactly what you’re looking at. You understand the difference between an OTF knife and a side-opening switchblade-style automatic, and you chose the long, polished classic on purpose. It’s a Texas collector piece first, a functional blade second, and a nod to decades of knife culture every time that button sends the steel home.