High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife - Yellow
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The High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife brings cannabis culture to a work-ready Texas pocket knife. A spring-assisted clip point blade with partial serrations snaps out fast from the thumb stud, locking solid on a liner lock. The black matte steel handles boxes, cord, and camp chores, while the bright yellow marijuana leaf over hex-textured scales makes it stand out in any roll. For Texans who know an assisted opener isn’t a switchblade but still want speed on tap, this piece hits the mark.
| Blade Length (inches) | 3.5 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 8.25 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 4.75 |
| Weight (oz.) | 4.62 |
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Partial-Serrated |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Handle Material | Plastic |
| Theme | Marijuana Leaf |
| Safety | Liner lock |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Spring-assisted |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |
High Noon Hex-Leaf: A Texas-Assisted Opening Knife with Attitude
The High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife is a spring-assisted folding knife built for real everyday use, dressed in bold cannabis culture graphics. This is not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. It’s an assisted opening pocket knife: you start the blade with the thumb stud, the internal spring takes it the rest of the way, and the liner lock holds it steady. For Texas buyers who care how a knife actually works, that distinction matters.
What Makes This an Assisted Opening Knife (Not a Switchblade)
Mechanically, this High Noon Hex-Leaf rides in the assisted opening lane. The 3.5-inch black matte clip point blade stays closed until you intentionally nudge it with the thumb stud. Once you break that detent, the spring-assist engages and snaps the blade into lockup. That’s a different story than a true automatic switchblade, where a button or lever fires the blade from a fully at-rest position without you starting the motion.
An OTF knife is another animal entirely: the blade rides inside the handle and moves straight out the front along a track. Here, we’ve got a side-opening assisted folder with a liner lock, a straightforward Texas-ready EDC design. The assisted mechanism gives you quick deployment without the legal and mechanical complexity of a switchblade or an OTF knife.
Clip Point with Partial Serrations
The blade is a classic clip point in matte black steel, long enough at 3.5 inches to feel useful, short enough to ride easy in the pocket. Partial serrations near the base give you bite on cord, straps, and rough packaging, while the plain edge toward the tip stays ready for cleaner cuts and detail work. For a Texas workday that runs from opening boxes to cutting rope at the lease, this mix makes sense.
Liner Lock Confidence
A steel liner lock secures the blade once it’s open. Push the stud, feel the assist kick, and the lock slides into place behind the tang. It’s simple, proven, and easy to close one-handed once you’re done. No hidden safeties, no mystery buttons—just a clear, reliable lock that Texas collectors and everyday carriers both recognize on sight.
Cannabis Culture Meets Everyday Texas Carry
Visually, this assisted opening knife doesn’t whisper. A bright yellow marijuana leaf stretches across the handle over a black hex-textured background, giving you a clear cannabis theme that still sits on a tactical-style base. For Texas owners who enjoy cannabis culture aesthetics—whatever their personal habits—this knife reads more like a lifestyle signal than a toy.
Under the graphics, the handle is all business: matte-finished plastic scales with hex-style texture, finger grooves for a natural grip, and jimping on the spine where your thumb lands. At 8.25 inches overall and 4.75 inches closed, it fills the hand without turning into a belt anchor. The weight, just over four and a half ounces, carries like a solid work knife, not a flimsy novelty.
Pocket Clip and Lanyard Options
A pocket clip on the reverse side keeps this assisted opening knife where you want it—clipped to jeans, work pants, or the edge of a bag. A lanyard hole at the rear opens up more carry and personalization options, from paracord pulls to bead work that matches the cannabis theme. For Texas collectors who rotate blades by mood, that little bit of customization goes a long way.
Texas Law, Assisted Openers, and Where This Knife Fits
Texas knife law has loosened over the years, but buyers still care about where a piece lands on the spectrum from manual folder to switchblade or OTF knife. This High Noon Hex-Leaf is an assisted opening knife, meaning you start the blade manually and the spring helps you finish. It is not a push-button automatic knife, and the blade does not travel out the front like an OTF knife.
Under current Texas law, most blades are broadly legal to own and carry, but locations and blade length can still matter. That’s why some Texans deliberately choose an assisted opening knife as their everyday pocket companion: you get fast, one-handed opening without stepping into full switchblade or OTF territory. As always, it’s on the buyer to check current local regulations and any location-based restrictions, but in terms of mechanism, this piece lives squarely in the assisted folder category.
Collector Appeal: Cannabis Theme, Working Steel
For a serious Texas knife collector, not every piece has to be a custom or a safe queen. Some earn their spot because they say something about a time, a culture, or a subculture. This High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife does that for cannabis-themed gear. The marijuana leaf isn’t subtle, but it’s printed on a handle that’s built to be used, not just stared at.
The black matte steel blade, partial serrations, and spring assist make it more than a display item. It’s an inexpensive, pocket-ready assisted opening knife you can actually put to work without babying it. That combination—novelty theme over a functional assisted mechanism—is what earns it drawer space alongside your more serious automatics, OTF knives, and traditional switchblades.
How It Sits Beside Your Automatics and OTF Knives
If your Texas collection already includes true automatic knives and a couple of OTF knives, this one fills a different slot. It’s the knife you hand a buddy who appreciates cannabis culture and needs something simple he won’t break or lose sleep over. It shows off a theme your high-end pieces don’t carry, while still letting you talk mechanism: why this is assisted, why that one is a button-fired switchblade, and how an OTF knife rides a track instead of a pivot.
What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Knives
Is an assisted opening knife the same as an automatic or OTF knife?
No. An assisted opening knife like the High Noon Hex-Leaf needs you to start opening the blade with a thumb stud or flipper before the spring kicks in. An automatic knife—or switchblade—uses a button or similar control to fire the blade from a fully closed, at-rest position. An OTF knife moves the blade in and out of the handle along a track, usually with a sliding switch. All three are fast, but an assisted opening knife is mechanically simpler and usually treated differently under the law.
Are assisted opening knives legal to carry in Texas?
Texas law is generally friendly to knife owners, and assisted opening knives fall into the broader category of folding knives rather than classic switchblades or OTF knives. Blade length and location restrictions can still apply, especially in certain public or restricted areas. If you’re carrying this assisted opening knife in Texas, treat it like any other substantial pocket folder: know the current state statutes, check local rules where you live or work, and respect posted policies where you visit.
Why would a collector pick this assisted opener over a plain EDC?
A Texas collector might choose the High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife because it blends a bold cannabis theme with a real, usable assisted mechanism. The spring-assisted clip point blade, partial serrations, and liner lock give it working credentials, while the bright yellow marijuana leaf over the hex-textured handle makes it stand out in a drawer full of black and gray EDCs. It’s a conversation piece you can actually cut with, not just pass around.
A Texas Knife for Folks Who Know Their Mechanisms
The High Noon Hex-Leaf Assisted Opening Knife is for Texans who can explain the difference between a manual folder, an assisted opening knife, an automatic knife, and an OTF knife without reaching for a glossary. It’s a pocket-sized nod to cannabis culture wrapped around a straightforward assisted mechanism, ready for mail runs, garage projects, and camp chores. If you like your blades fast but don’t need a button-fired switchblade every day, this assisted opener fits the hand, the pocket, and the Texas collection without trying too hard.