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Marble Mirage Collector Stiletto Automatic Knife - White Marble/Rainbow

Price:

21.99


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Prismatic Arc Quick-Deploy Automatic Knife - Rainbow Tinite
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Marble Mirage Godfather-Style Stiletto Automatic Knife - White Marble Rainbow

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1838/image_1920?unique=67bd717

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This stiletto automatic knife is built for the Texas buyer who knows the difference between an automatic and an OTF. A rainbow-finished spear point snaps out with a crisp push-button, locking solid with a safety switch for pocket peace of mind. The white marble-look handle and iridescent hardware give it that Godfather-style silhouette collectors notice in a case from ten feet away. It’s the kind of automatic you carry to a Texas steakhouse and set on the dresser when you get home.

21.99 21.99 USD 21.99

GF8155RW1

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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 Rainbow
Blade Finish Iridescent
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Synthetic
Button Type Push Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip No

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Marble Mirage Stiletto Automatic Knife for Texas Collectors

This Marble Mirage Godfather-style stiletto automatic knife is exactly what it looks like: a classic side-opening automatic, not an OTF knife and not an assisted opener pretending to be a switchblade. Hit the push-button and the rainbow spear point swings out from the side on a pivot, locks up, and sits in that long, lean stiletto profile collectors think of when they picture a traditional switchblade in an old movie.

Here, the primary story is simple and specific. This is a stiletto automatic knife built for display and light carry, not a tactical OTF and not a thumb-stud folder. Texas buyers who care about mechanisms will recognize the difference the first time they feel that button fire and hear the lock engage.

Automatic Stiletto Mechanism: Side-Opening, Not OTF

An automatic knife like this Marble Mirage opens from the side on a pivot. The round push-button on the handle releases a spring-loaded blade that swings out and locks. That push-button activation is what makes it a true automatic, and its long, narrow spear point and swiveling-style bolsters are what make it a classic stiletto automatic instead of a modern tactical profile.

How This Automatic Differs from an OTF Knife

An OTF knife, or out-the-front knife, drives the blade straight forward through a slot in the handle. You work a thumb slide or trigger, and the blade travels in and out along the handle’s length. This Marble Mirage doesn’t do that. It’s a side-opening automatic that folds into the handle like a traditional switchblade, with the blade rotating on a pivot and the edge protected between those white marble-look scales.

Collectors who mix OTF knives, switchblades, and assisted openers in one drawer know why this matters. The automatic stiletto gives you that long, dramatic profile and a simple, proven side-pivot mechanism. An OTF knife focuses on fast, linear deployment; this stiletto automatic knife leans into style, line, and that old-school movie silhouette.

Push-Button and Safety: Everyday Confidence

The front-facing push button drives the whole story. Press it and the spring sends the 3.125-inch rainbow spear point into lock-up. A sliding safety switch on the handle gives you extra insurance when you drop it in a pouch or display it on a table with other automatics and OTF knives. It’s a straightforward mechanism: button to open, safety to secure, and a classic lock you can feel click into place.

Design Details: Rainbow Blade, Marble Handle, Godfather Lines

Visually, this automatic stiletto knife lives in the showpiece lane. The rainbow iridescent blade and matching bolsters catch light from every angle. The white marble-look synthetic handle scales give it a clean, upscale contrast that makes the colors stand out even more. Gold-tone pins and hardware tie it together and keep it from looking like a tactical knife; this is a display-oriented switchblade-style automatic with Italian roots and modern flair.

Blade and Dimensions That Feel Right in Hand

The spear point blade runs 3.125 inches, long enough to keep that traditional stiletto look without feeling unwieldy. Closed, the knife measures about 5 inches; open, it stretches to roughly 8.75 inches overall. That puts it in a comfortable full-size pocket category, easily slipped into a jacket or boot sheath when a Texas buyer wants a little flash without hauling a huge combat-style piece.

The blade itself is a plain-edge spear point in iridescent rainbow steel. No serrations, no gimmicks—just a clean piercing profile that fits the classic stiletto story. It’s not built as a hard-use ranch tool; it’s the automatic you carry for the feel, the look, and the conversation when it opens with that crisp snap.

Texas Carry Reality: Automatic Knife in a Texas World

Texas buyers live in one of the friendliest knife environments in the country. State law allows most types of knives, including automatic knives and OTF knives, as long as you respect location restrictions and the broader weapons rules. That means a Texas collector can own this stiletto automatic alongside modern OTF knives and traditional switchblades without dancing around outdated statutes that still trip up other states.

Where this Marble Mirage shines is in how it fits your Texas day. It’s not a toolbox workhorse; it’s the automatic knife you clip into a dress boot sheath for a night out in Houston, drop into a console for a Hill Country drive, or set out in a home display alongside your favorite side-opening switchblades and OTF knives. The lack of a pocket clip reinforces that role—this knife prefers a soft pouch, case, or curated tray to a rough-and-tumble work pocket.

Automatic vs OTF vs Switchblade: Where This Stiletto Sits

If you’re building out a Texas collection, it helps to know exactly where this knife belongs. Mechanically, it’s a side-opening automatic knife with a push-button and safety. Stylistically, it’s a classic Italian-style stiletto, the same profile most folks picture when they say “switchblade,” even if they don’t know the terminology. Functionally, it sits apart from both assisted openers and OTF knives.

Assisted knives need you to start the blade manually before a spring takes over. This Marble Mirage doesn’t wait on your thumb; the blade fires fully from the closed position with one button press. OTF knives push the blade out the front through the handle. This knife never leaves the side-opening lane—blade, bolster, and marble handle moving in that familiar arc collectors know by heart.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Stiletto Automatic Knives

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

In Texas terms, this is a side-opening automatic knife in a stiletto pattern. Many people call this style a switchblade, and they’re talking about this exact Godfather-style profile. Technically, it’s not an OTF knife because the blade doesn’t come straight out the front; it swings out from the side on a pivot when you hit the push button. So: automatic knife, stiletto pattern, switchblade style—not an OTF.

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

Texas law currently allows ownership and general carry of automatic knives, including stiletto switchblade-style knives and OTF knives, for adults in most everyday situations. The big caveats are location-based restrictions—certain secured, school-related, or government locations have their own rules—and any federal or local provisions that might apply. A serious Texas collector checks the most current Texas statutes and any local regulations before pocketing an automatic, but as a rule, this type of automatic stiletto is legal to own and enjoy in-state.

Why would a Texas collector choose this over a more tactical OTF?

Because not every knife in the drawer has to solve a problem. A tactical OTF knife is about deployment speed and utility. This Marble Mirage automatic knife is about line, color, and that old-world stiletto silhouette. The white marble handle and rainbow blade make it a display-grade piece that pops in a glass case or on a tabletop next to more subdued automatics and OTF knives. A collector doesn’t buy this instead of a work knife; they buy it to round out the story their collection tells.

Collector Value for the Texas Automatic Knife Drawer

For a Texas collector who already owns modern flippers, assisted openers, and a few OTF knives, this Marble Mirage fills a very specific slot: the classic Godfather-style stiletto automatic with modern finishes. It balances old-school switchblade charm with contemporary rainbow steel and marble-look scales. At 5 inches closed, it displays cleanly in most cases and lays well across a palm when you’re showing it off to another knife person who actually knows what they’re looking at.

There’s no confusion about what this is. It’s a side-opening automatic stiletto with a push-button, a safety switch, and the kind of lines that made this pattern famous decades ago. The rainbow and marble finish keep it from blending into a drawer full of black tactical knives, and the mechanism keeps it firmly in the automatic knife world instead of the assisted or manual categories.

In a Texas collection, that clarity matters. You’re not buying a novelty; you’re buying a specific mechanism, a specific profile, and a specific visual story. If you want one automatic that says “classic switchblade look” while still holding its own next to modern OTF knives, this Marble Mirage Godfather-style stiletto automatic knife earns its spot on the velvet.