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Green-Eyed Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

Price:

3.99


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Green-Eyed Reaper Hidden Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/754/image_1920?unique=38b7b09

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This hidden karambit comb knife rides in your pocket like a harmless grooming tool, then flips the script with a curved hawkbill blade and a skull pattern that stares back. The green-eyed skull art, detachable comb cover, and finger ring give you comb, concealment, and control in one compact piece. It’s a disguised knife built for real light-duty cuts and real conversation, the kind of comb knife a Texas collector keeps close just for the reveal.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Black
Handle Finish Glossy
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb

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The Green-Eyed Reaper isn’t pretending to be a switchblade, an OTF knife, or an automatic. It’s a hidden karambit comb knife that rides under the radar until you decide otherwise. At first glance, you’ve just got a full-size comb wrapped in black-and-white skulls with neon green eyes. Then your finger finds the karambit-style ring, the cover slides away, and a curved hawkbill blade shows up where the teeth used to be.

Hidden karambit comb knife with a Texas-ready attitude

This is a concealed comb knife first and foremost—a compact folding blade that hides inside a detachable comb cover. No springs snapping open, no button-actuated action like a true automatic knife or switchblade. You’re working with a manually deployed blade dressed in karambit features: finger ring for retention, hawkbill curve for control, and a profile that feels familiar to anyone who’s handled a ringed knife before.

In Texas, that distinction matters. You’re not carrying an OTF knife shooting straight out the front, and you’re not packing a side-opening automatic or classic switchblade. You’re carrying a hidden comb knife with a manual deployment that just happens to look like it came out of a grim reaper’s pocket.

Mechanism and control: how this comb knife really works

The Green-Eyed Reaper runs on a simple truth: a disguised knife only earns its place if it actually works as a blade. Under the comb cover, you’ve got a 3-inch curved hawkbill-style black blade set into a slim handle with a karambit-style finger ring at the end. The cover acts like a sheath, snapping over the blade and finishing the illusion of a full comb.

Manual deployment, not automatic or OTF

To get from comb to knife, you slide or pull the cover clear, index into the ring, and bring the hawkbill into play. There’s no spring assist, no button, no out-the-front mechanism. That keeps the design lighter, simpler, and mechanically honest—more like a compact folding knife in disguise than any kind of automatic or OTF knife.

Hawkbill curve and ring for practical cuts

The hawkbill edge gives you natural draw-cut power. Instead of skating off material, the curve pulls the cut into the blade—handy for opening packages, slicing cord, or any small task where control beats reach. The ring keeps your grip anchored. Drop your finger into the ring, and you’ve got orientation, retention, and a little bit of that karambit drama Texas collectors enjoy.

Why Texas collectors pay attention to this hidden comb knife

Texas buyers know there’s a difference between a showpiece and something that’ll earn pocket time. This hidden comb knife sits right in the middle. At 7.5 inches overall and about 4.5 inches concealed, it carries like a regular comb—slim, light, and easy to forget until you want to remember it. The 1.16-ounce weight means it disappears in a pocket, bag, or truck console.

What makes it stand out is the story it tells when it comes out. The black skull graphic with those bright green eyes reads loud enough to catch attention in a display case or on a Texas flea market table, but the real hook is the reveal. One second, you’re holding a comb. The next, you’ve got a curved black blade in a ring grip, and everybody around you is asking where you got it.

Display value for shops and shows

For Texas retailers and show tables, this comb knife is built for demos. The skull pattern and green eyes pull folks in; the transformation from comb to karambit-style blade closes the loop. It’s the piece you reach for when someone says, “Show me something different—something hidden.” It does that job without needing to be an automatic knife or a flashy OTF switchblade.

Comb knife vs. automatic knife, OTF knife, and switchblade

If you’ve shopped automatic knives or OTF knives in Texas, you already know how many sites blur the lines and call everything a switchblade. This hidden comb knife is a different animal altogether. It’s a manually activated, disguised blade that happens to wear karambit clothing.

An automatic knife uses a spring to snap the blade out from the side when you hit a button or lever. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle, often double-action, in and out on command. A traditional switchblade is just a specific style of side-opening automatic. This Green-Eyed Reaper comb knife does none of that. You take the cover off by hand and bring the blade into play like a low-profile folder. No legal gray area about a button-fired mechanism, just a hidden knife built around a clever cover and skull-heavy art.

Texas context: carrying a hidden comb knife the smart way

Texas law has relaxed a lot over the years on knife length and carry, but responsible ownership still starts with knowing what you’ve actually got. This is not an OTF knife or an automatic switchblade; it’s a concealed comb knife with a manual blade and a karambit-style ring. That usually puts it closer to a novelty folding knife in the eyes of the law, but every Texas county and city can flavor enforcement their own way.

The practical play: treat it like any other knife you respect. Don’t carry it where blades are clearly banned, don’t wave the hidden aspect around to cause trouble, and know the rules for your part of Texas before you slide it into a pocket. It’s a great conversation starter at a gun show, a ranch gathering, or a swap meet—less so at a courthouse checkpoint.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Hidden Karambit Comb Knives

Is this hidden comb knife considered a switchblade or automatic in Texas?

No. This Green-Eyed Reaper is a manual hidden comb knife. You physically remove the comb cover and bring the blade into position yourself. There’s no button, no spring, and no out-the-front mechanism like a true OTF knife. Because it isn’t an automatic knife or classic switchblade, it usually sits in a different legal bucket—but you should still check local Texas rules, especially for schools, government buildings, and posted properties.

Can I legally carry this hidden comb knife in Texas?

In most of Texas, carrying a knife with this blade length and manual action is generally legal for adults, especially after the state loosened restrictions on many knife types. That said, some locations—schools, courthouses, certain events—are off-limits for any knife, whether it’s a comb knife, an automatic, or an OTF knife. The smart move is simple: verify your local ordinances, respect posted signs, and carry this disguised knife the same way you’d carry any other blade you care about.

Why would a Texas collector choose this over a standard folding knife?

A straightforward folding knife will always have its place, and so will a high-end automatic knife or OTF switchblade. This hidden comb knife earns pocket time for a different reason: it tells a better story. The green-eyed skull pattern, the karambit-style ring, and the hawkbill blade tucked inside a comb cover give you a reveal you just don’t get from a conventional folder. For a Texas collector who already owns the usual suspects, this is the piece you pull out when you want to surprise somebody who thinks they’ve seen it all.

In the end, the Green-Eyed Reaper Hidden Karambit Comb Knife is built for Texans who know the difference between a gimmick and a good story backed by real steel. It’s not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a classic switchblade—it’s a hidden comb knife that carries light, cuts clean for small tasks, and shows off a skull-heavy attitude when you decide it’s time. If your collection already spans side-openers, out-the-fronts, and straight-ahead folders, this is the disguised blade that fills the gap and nods quietly to everyone who knows what they’re looking at.