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Blue Marble Godfather Elegance + Stiletto Automatic Knife - Glossy Finish

Price:

16.99


Blackout Godfather Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Matte Black
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Godfather Blue Marble Stiletto Automatic Knife - Glossy Finish

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1786/image_1920?unique=aa24e34

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This Godfather blue marble stiletto automatic knife is classic Italian attitude tuned for Texas hands. A slim 3.125" spear point blade snaps open with a front push button and locks down with a safety slide, giving you true automatic action—not an OTF, not an assisted opener. At 8.75" overall, it rides well in a coat or boot and looks right at home in a serious Texas switchblade and automatic knife collection.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

GF6BL

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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
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3.125
Overall Length (inches) 8.75
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Plastic
Button Type Push Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip No

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Godfather-Style Stiletto Automatic Knife, Explained the Texas Way

This Godfather blue marble stiletto automatic knife is a classic Italian-style side opener with true automatic action. You press the button on the handle, the spring takes over, and the slim spear point blade snaps into lockup. It is not an OTF knife, and it’s not an assisted opener. It’s a traditional stiletto automatic knife built for collectors who know the difference and care about the details.

That long, narrow profile, glossy blue marble handle, and polished silver bolsters put it squarely in the switchblade stiletto tradition. In Texas, buyers use all three terms—automatic knife, switchblade, stiletto—but this piece is mechanically a side-opening automatic with Godfather-era styling, not a double-action OTF knife.

How This Stiletto Automatic Knife Actually Works

Mechanically, this knife is a straightforward side-opening automatic knife. The blade is folded into the handle like any folding knife, but held under spring tension. When you press the round push button on the front side of the handle, the lock releases and the spring drives the 3.125" spear point blade into the open position in one clean motion.

Side-Opening Automatic vs. OTF Knife

With this stiletto, the blade pivots out from the side on a hinge—classic switchblade behavior. An OTF knife (out-the-front knife) sends the blade straight forward out of the handle, riding on internal tracks. Both are automatic knives, but only the OTF knife moves along the handle’s length. This Godfather-style stiletto keeps the traditional side-opening action collectors expect from an Italian switchblade design.

Safety Slide and Lockup

Next to the button sits a sliding safety. When you thumb it into the safe position, it blocks the button so this automatic knife doesn’t open by accident in a pocket, pack, or glovebox. Open, the blade locks up with a familiar button-lock system—press the button again to fold it shut. It’s a simple, proven mechanism that stiletto switchblade collectors have trusted for decades.

Design Story: Godfather Stiletto with Blue Marble Attitude

The first thing you notice is the silhouette: long, slim, and absolutely stiletto. The second is that deep blue marble handle, glossy and patterned like stone under polished silver bolsters. It looks like something that belongs in a glass case, but it’s built to be flicked open and passed around a Texas tailgate without babying it.

The polished spear point blade carries a clean plain edge. No serrations, no tactical cutouts—just a narrow profile that fits the stiletto switchblade heritage. Brass pins, silver bolsters, and that front-facing button complete the Godfather look. It’s the kind of automatic knife that tells a story before you ever press the button.

Carry Reality: Coat Pocket, Boot, or Desk Drawer

At 8.75" overall and 5" closed, this isn’t a tiny EDC box-cutter. It’s a slim, dressy automatic knife that rides best in a coat pocket, a boot, or a bag. There’s no pocket clip, which keeps the lines clean and the profile true to traditional Italian stiletto switchblades. For Texas buyers, that means it’s more of a statement piece than a hard-use ranch tool, though it’ll still open boxes and cut cord just fine.

Texas Context: Automatic Knife and Switchblade Law

Texas made peace with knives before a lot of other states did. Under current Texas law, automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives are generally legal to own and carry for adults, with length and location restrictions mostly folded into the broader "location-restricted knife" rules. That means a stiletto automatic knife like this Godfather-style piece usually lives in the same legal bucket as other automatic knives in Texas, not in some special switchblade penalty box.

It’s still on you to stay up on the latest Texas statutes and local rules—especially about schools, government buildings, and certain posted locations. But in most Texas towns, a collector carrying a side-opening automatic knife like this blue marble stiletto is well within the spirit of today’s law, right alongside folks carrying OTF knives and other modern automatics.

Why This Automatic Stiletto Belongs in a Texas Collection

Texas knife folks tend to own more than one blade, and they tend to tell them apart. You might have an out-the-front knife for quick utility, a workhorse side-opening automatic knife for the ranch, and then a few classic switchblade stilettos that exist mainly because they make you smile.

This Godfather blue marble stiletto falls squarely into that last category: a statement piece that still works. The glossy blue marble handle stands out in a drawer full of black tacticals. The Godfather-era silhouette connects to the old Italian switchblade tradition. And the clean side-opening automatic mechanism makes it easy to demonstrate the difference between a true OTF knife, an assisted opener, and a classic automatic stiletto.

Display, Trade, and Talk Value

Collectors trade on story as much as steel. This knife has both: a recognizable Godfather-style pattern and a distinctive blue marble finish that doesn’t disappear in a lineup. It’s the sort of automatic knife a Texas collector can lay down next to a double-action OTF and a modern assisted folder and walk a new buyer through all three knife types in plain English.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Automatic Knives

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

Mechanically, it’s a side-opening automatic knife. In common language, it’s also fair to call it a stiletto switchblade because it has the classic Italian profile and push-button automatic action. It is not an OTF knife—the blade pivots from the side rather than shooting straight out the front. All OTFs are automatic knives, but not all automatic knives are OTF. This one is the traditional side-opening style.

Are stiletto automatic knives like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas removed its old switchblade ban years ago, and modern Texas law generally treats automatic knives, switchblades, and OTF knives much the same. For most adults, owning and carrying an automatic stiletto like this is legal, with restrictions focused more on blade length in sensitive locations than on the opening mechanism itself. Laws can change, and some places have their own rules, so a quick check of current Texas statutes is always smart.

Is this more of a user knife or a collector piece?

This Godfather-style stiletto automatic will handle light cutting just fine, but its real value is as a collector and conversation piece. The blue marble handle, glossy finish, and classic switchblade stiletto lines make it ideal for display, trading, or carrying on those Texas evenings when you want something with more attitude than a plain utility blade. It earns its place next to your OTF knife and your workhorse automatic by doing one thing well: looking and opening exactly like a Godfather-style stiletto should.

In the end, this blue marble Godfather stiletto automatic knife is for the Texan who can tell an OTF from a side opener at a glance and enjoys owning both. It doesn’t pretend to be a tactical beater or a survival tool. It’s a clean, classic automatic switchblade stiletto with Texas-legal manners and enough style to hold its own in any serious collection from Amarillo to the Valley.