Skip to Content
Heritage Glimmer Damascus-Pattern Pocket Knife - Wood

Price:

8.99


Field Utility Sawback M9 Bayonet Knife - Matte Steel
Field Utility Sawback M9 Bayonet Knife - Matte Steel
47.99 47.99
Sleekflip Tanto Balance Butterfly Knife Trainer - Black
Sleekflip Tanto Balance Butterfly Knife Trainer - Black
9.99 9.99

Heritage Glimmer Gentleman’s Pocket Knife - Damascus Wood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3343/image_1920?unique=989779c

12 sold in last 24 hours

This gentleman’s pocket knife pairs a Damascus-pattern clip point blade with engraved bolsters and warm wood scales for true heritage character. A manual liner lock keeps the 2-inch stainless blade secure, while the thumb hole makes one-handed opening easy and deliberate. In a Texas pocket, it’s the kind of everyday carry that feels right at a feed store counter or a Hill Country wedding—compact, useful, and quietly collectible for someone who knows their pocket knives.

8.99 8.99 USD 8.99

A002DMWD

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 2
Overall Length (inches) 4.5
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Damascus
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Material Wood
Theme Damascus
Handle Length (inches) 2.5

We Have These Similar Products Ready to Ship

What This Gentleman’s Pocket Knife Really Is

This is a compact gentleman’s pocket knife built for everyday carry, not a tactical automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. It’s a manual folding pocket knife with a liner lock, a Damascus-pattern stainless blade, and warm wood scales—exactly the kind of piece a Texas collector reaches for when they want something classy in the pocket that still cuts cord, opens mail, and trims a stray thread without fanfare.

The primary story here is simple: a traditional, manually opening pocket knife dressed in Damascus-pattern steel and engraved bolsters. No hidden springs, no button-fired switchblade mechanism, no OTF track to worry about—just a thumb hole, a smooth pivot, and a lock that does its job without asking for attention.

Damascus-Pattern Gentleman’s Pocket Knife Mechanism

Mechanically, this knife is a straightforward manual folding pocket knife. You open it with the large round thumb hole cut into the blade, swing it out on the pivot, and the liner lock snaps into place behind the tang. To close it, you move that liner aside with your thumb and fold the blade back into the handle. That’s it. No automatic knife spring, no OTF knife slider, no switchblade button hiding in the bolsters.

For a Texas buyer who cares about the difference, this matters. An automatic knife uses an internal spring to drive the blade open when you hit a button or lever. A switchblade is just a side-opening automatic knife by another name. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle along a track. This gentleman’s pocket knife is none of those—it’s a manual folder. You provide the power; the liner lock provides the security.

Blade and Build Details for Collectors

The 2-inch clip point blade gives you that familiar Western profile—fine enough for detail work, stout enough for everyday tasks. The Damascus-style finish lays down a patterned surface that reads heirloom at a glance, even though the underlying steel is a practical stainless that shrugs off daily use. Engraved stainless bolsters frame contoured reddish-brown wood scales, with Torx fasteners holding everything tight and a lanyard hole at the butt fitted with a leather thong.

It carries small: 4.5 inches overall open, with a 2.5-inch handle that disappears into a pocket or rides easily on a key lanyard. It’s more gentleman’s pocket knife than hard-use field tool, but it’s capable enough that Texas buyers won’t hesitate to put it to work.

How This Pocket Knife Fits Texas Everyday Carry

In Texas, everyday carry is as much about feel as it is about function. This pocket knife feels right in a pair of starched jeans, a blazer pocket, or tossed in the console of a ranch truck. The leather lanyard makes it easy to grab from a deep pocket or hang from a key hook in the mudroom. You’re not snapping it open like an automatic knife at a jobsite; you’re quietly rolling it open with your thumb at the tailgate.

Because it’s a manual folding pocket knife rather than a switchblade or OTF knife, it comes across as understated and polite. At a Texas barbecue or around the office, that matters. You’re the person who helps open packages, cut twine, and slice into feed bags, not the person putting on a show with an aggressive automatic blade.

Texas Law Context: Manual vs. Automatic

Texas law has eased up over the years, and automatic knives and even large blades are broadly legal to own and carry for most adults. But the cultural line still exists. A manual pocket knife like this gentleman’s folder reads as a tool first. Where an OTF knife or a spring-fired switchblade might draw questions from someone who doesn’t know knives, this one usually just gets a nod and a “nice knife.” For many Texas collectors, that low-profile acceptance is worth as much as any legal distinction.

Collector Appeal: Heritage Look, Everyday Role

For a Texas collector, this pocket knife earns its keep in two ways: heritage styling and honest usability. The Damascus-pattern blade and engraved bolsters give it that heirloom energy—something you could hand to a nephew or tuck into a display case alongside more expensive Damascus blades. The wood handle and leather lanyard add warmth that you won’t find on a lot of modern tactical folders, automatic knives, or OTF knives with aluminum or G10 handles.

At the same time, it’s priced and built to be used. This isn’t a safe queen. It’s a weekday companion that handles light EDC tasks while looking like it came out of an older, slower Texas. That makes it a good "bridge" piece: fancy enough for a collector’s drawer, approachable enough for someone just starting to understand the difference between a pocket knife, an automatic knife, and a switchblade.

Where It Sits in a Serious Collection

In a drawer full of big automatics, OTF knives, and modern flippers, this knife fills the gentleman’s slot: the one you loan to your dad, or carry to a wedding, or slip into your pocket on Sunday. It’s not competing with a double-action OTF knife for mechanical fireworks. It’s offering a different kind of satisfaction—the click of the liner lock, the shine of the Damascus pattern, the way the wood darkens with use.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Gentleman’s Pocket Knives

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

None of the above. This is a manual gentleman’s pocket knife with a liner lock. You open it with the thumb hole and your own thumb pressure. A switchblade or automatic knife opens by pressing a button or lever that releases a spring. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out of the handle on a track, usually with a slider or switch. With this pocket knife, there’s no spring assist, no automatic action—just a classic folding mechanism that Texas collectors recognize immediately.

Is this kind of pocket knife legal to carry in Texas?

Under current Texas law, manual folding pocket knives like this gentleman’s knife are widely legal for adults to own and carry, and they typically draw less attention than an automatic knife or aggressive OTF knife. Blade length is modest at about 2 inches, and there’s no spring-driven switchblade mechanism. As always, specific locations—schools, courthouses, certain posted venues—can have their own restrictions, so a smart Texas carrier still pays attention to posted signs and local rules.

Why would a collector choose this over a modern tactical folder?

A modern tactical folder or automatic knife might win on raw speed and grip texture, but this gentleman’s pocket knife wins on character. The Damascus-style blade, engraved bolsters, and wood scales give it a heritage look most tactical knives and OTF knives can’t touch. It’s the piece you carry when image matters as much as function—around clients, at church, at a Hill Country wedding. For a Texas collector, having that option in the rotation is part of having a complete, thoughtful collection.

Closing Thoughts: A Texas Gentleman’s Everyday Knife

This gentleman’s pocket knife is for the Texan who knows the difference between a switchblade and a simple folder—and chooses the quiet one on purpose. It’s a manual Damascus-pattern pocket knife with a liner lock, wood handle, and everyday usefulness that fits Texas life from feed store to festival. In a world full of loud OTF knives and fast automatic knives, this one earns respect by being simple, handsome, and honest. If that sounds like your kind of Texas, it belongs in your pocket.