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Marble Royale Godfather Stiletto Switchblade - Red Marble

Price:

18.99


Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Blue ABS
Skyline Sprint Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Blue ABS
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Marble Godfather Elegance Stiletto Switchblade - White Marble
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Godfather Lineage Stiletto Switchblade Knife - Red Marble

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1824/image_1920?unique=ae9b41d

15 sold in last 24 hours

This stiletto switchblade carries that Godfather silhouette Texas collectors recognize from across the room. A 4.25-inch polished spear point snaps out with a front push button, then locks down with a safety when the show’s over. The red marble handle, gold pins, and long bolstered frame lean more dress knife than work knife—perfect for the case, the desk drawer, or the one you bring out when company understands the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a true switchblade.

18.99 18.99 USD 18.99

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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) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 9.75
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 5.4
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Button Type Push
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety switch
Pocket Clip No

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What This Stiletto Switchblade Is — And What It Isn’t

This is a classic Godfather-style stiletto switchblade, the long, lean side-opening automatic knife most Texans picture when they hear the word “switchblade.” The 4.25-inch polished spear point blade snaps out from the side with a front push button, rides on a traditional bolstered frame, and locks solid for that unmistakable old-world feel. It’s not an OTF knife and it’s not an assisted opener — it’s a true automatic switchblade built in the classic stiletto pattern.

In the hand, the Marble Royale Godfather Stiletto Switchblade feels like it belongs in a glass case next to your favorite Italian pieces, not in a drywall crew’s tool bucket. Texas collectors who know their mechanisms will spot the side-opening automatic action, the safety switch, and the long guard as signs this is a Godfather-lineage switchblade first, and a working automatic knife second.

Stiletto Switchblade Mechanism: Classic Side-Opening Automatic

Mechanically, this knife is a side-opening automatic knife with a stiletto profile. Press the front-mounted button and the spring drives the polished spear point straight out of the handle, pivoting on a traditional folding joint. That’s the hallmark of a switchblade: side-opening automatic deployment with a button or actuator in the handle. An OTF knife, by contrast, sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails. An assisted opener needs a manual nudge to start the blade moving. This piece needs none of that — one push and it’s fully deployed.

The safety switch on the handle lets you lock the button when you’re pocketing it, dropping it into a bag, or handing it across the table. That’s important with any automatic knife, but especially with a long stiletto switchblade like this. At 9.75 inches overall with the blade open, this is a showpiece length. You get the crowd-pleasing snap and presence switchblade buyers expect without giving up the basic security of a simple safety.

Blade, Steel, and Classic Stiletto Geometry

The blade is a polished, plain-edge spear point — symmetrical, narrow, and made to echo traditional Italian stilettos. The geometry is more about piercing and visual drama than box-cutting utility. You’re not buying this as your only ranch knife. You’re buying it because your collection already has a workhorse automatic knife, and you want the Godfather silhouette too.

Steel is a straightforward, durable stainless suited for display, light cutting, and casual handling. The polish and profile do more talking than the metallurgy here. For a Texas collector, that’s exactly the point: this is the knife you lay next to your modern OTF knife to show how the switchblade story started.

Handle, Red Marble, and Gold Accents

The handle wears glossy red marble-pattern scales framed by polished bolsters and pommel. Gold-tone pins run the length of the handle, adding a touch of casino-floor flash. It’s not pretending to be tactical. It’s loud on purpose. When a Texas buyer pulls this stiletto switchblade out at a show, the red marble and long profile announce it before the blade ever moves.

No pocket clip, no G10 texturing, no stealth. This is an automatic stiletto meant for a jacket pocket, a display stand, or a felt-lined drawer, not the MOLLE on a plate carrier.

Automatic Knife vs OTF vs Switchblade — Where This Knife Fits

Texas collectors care about terms, and this knife makes the discussion easy. All switchblades are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are switchblades. And neither is the same thing as an OTF knife.

  • Automatic knife: Blade deploys under spring power when you hit a button, lever, or switch. Side-opening and OTF both qualify.
  • Switchblade (this knife): Side-opening automatic knife with a button in the handle — classic stiletto profile in this case.
  • OTF knife: Automatic blade that travels straight out the front of the handle instead of pivoting from the side.

This Marble Royale piece is a textbook side-opening switchblade. When you lay it next to a modern double-action OTF knife, every difference stands out: the bolster construction versus an OTF chassis, the pivot versus linear travel, the Godfather lines versus modern duty styling. That contrast is half the fun for a Texas buyer who owns all three types.

Texas Context: Carrying a Stiletto Switchblade in the Lone Star State

Texas law has shifted in favor of knife owners over the past few years, and automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades all benefit from that change. Under current Texas law, most adult Texans can legally own and carry an automatic knife or switchblade, including classic stiletto patterns like this one, so long as they respect location restrictions and any blade-length rules that may apply in sensitive areas such as schools or certain government buildings.

With a 4.25-inch blade and 9.75-inch overall length, this switchblade sits squarely in the “large, obvious knife” category. It’s legal in much of Texas, but it’s not subtle. This is the automatic you slide into a jacket pocket on private property, take to a show, or keep in the truck console, not the one you clip invisibly inside gym shorts. When you’re talking to other Texas collectors about switchblade legal history, this is the kind of knife that makes the conversation real — easy to see, easy to understand, and clearly a switchblade, not an OTF.

Practical Texas Carry Reality

No pocket clip and that long stiletto profile mean this knife rides best in a pocket, case, or dedicated pouch. If you want a day-in, day-out ranch automatic, you’ll reach for a different automatic knife with a clip and more utility grind. If you want to show the young bucks in your family the difference between a switchblade and an OTF knife, this is the one that comes out of the safe.

Collector Value: Why This Red Marble Stiletto Switchblade Belongs in a Texas Collection

Collectors in Texas don’t buy this type of automatic knife to beat up. They buy it because it hits three points at once: classic design, recognizable Godfather lineage, and that red marble-and-gold dress flair.

  • Visual presence: At nearly ten inches open with that polished spear point, this switchblade owns its space in a case.
  • Mechanism story: True side-opening automatic switchblade — a clean example you can use to explain automatic vs OTF vs assisted to newer collectors.
  • Theme: Godfather-style stiletto with a Texas-friendly flash of color and metal.
  • Price-to-impact ratio: Looks like a high-dollar display piece, lands in the accessible range for volume buyers and show traders.

For Texas retailers, it’s a traffic-stopper in the case: folks come over to see the red marble Godfather knife, and you end up talking them through everything from their first automatic knife to a higher-end OTF knife on the next shelf. For the private collector, it’s the kind of switchblade you don’t mind passing around at a backyard gathering because you’re not risking a one-of-one custom.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Switchblades

Is this stiletto switchblade the same thing as an OTF or just any automatic knife?

No. This knife is a side-opening stiletto switchblade — a specific kind of automatic knife. You press the button and the blade pivots out from the side on a hinge. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle on rails, which feels completely different in the hand. Both are automatic knives because they use spring power, but collectors use “switchblade” for side-openers like this and “OTF knife” for front-deploy designs. This Marble Royale is firmly on the switchblade side of that line.

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

As of current Texas law, adults can generally own and carry automatic knives, including switchblades and OTF knives, with far fewer restrictions than in years past. That said, blade length and restricted locations still matter. At 4.25 inches and with a very obvious stiletto profile, this knife is better treated as a show, collection, or private-property carry piece. Texans should always confirm the latest state and local rules, especially around schools, government buildings, and posted properties, before pocketing any automatic knife or switchblade.

Is this more of a user or a display piece for a Texas collection?

Functionally, it’s a working automatic knife, but its real value for a Texas buyer is as a display and conversation knife. The red marble handle, gold pins, and Godfather stiletto profile give it more in common with vintage Italian switchblades than with modern hard-use OTF knives. Most serious collectors in Texas will keep this one clean, oil the pivot, and bring it out when it’s time to explain what a switchblade is — and why an automatic knife or OTF knife isn’t quite the same thing.

In the end, this Marble Royale Godfather Stiletto Switchblade feels right at home in Texas: a little showy, unapologetically long, and mechanically honest about what it is. If you’re the kind of buyer who already owns a modern OTF knife and a few practical automatics, this red marble switchblade fills the Godfather-shaped gap in your drawer — and quietly lets other Texans know you don’t confuse your knife terms.