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Midnight Skeleton Flip-Open EDC Knife - Black Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/8061/image_1920?unique=71df1ab

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This Midnight Skeleton Flip-Open EDC Knife is a modern folding knife built for Texans who like their gear fast, clean, and reliable. A ball bearing flipper snaps the 3.5" drop point blade into place, then the button lock keeps it there until you’re done. It rides deep in the pocket, light from its skeletonized metal handle, and comes out ready for work, not show. For a Texas buyer who knows the difference between folders, automatics, and OTF knives, this one earns its keep.

22.99 22.99 USD 22.99

TF1035BK

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What This Midnight Skeleton Flip-Open EDC Knife Really Is

This Midnight Skeleton Flip-Open EDC Knife is a modern folding knife with a ball bearing flipper and button lock, built for everyday carry instead of flash. It’s not an automatic knife, it’s not an OTF knife, and it’s not a switchblade. You start the blade with the flipper tab, the bearings do the rest, and the button lock holds it open solid. For a Texas collector who cares about mechanism as much as looks, that clarity matters.

The 3.5-inch drop point blade gives you a clean, usable edge for real cutting jobs, while the skeletonized black metal handle keeps weight down and grip positive. It rides low and quiet in your pocket, but opens with purpose when you need it.

Ball Bearing Flipper Folding Knife: Mechanism That Earns Respect

This knife is a classic flipper-based folding knife riding on a ball bearing pivot. That means the blade is manually opened, but once you nudge the flipper tab, the smooth bearing system swings the blade out with a fast, confident action. It may feel as quick as some automatic knives, but from a mechanism and legal standpoint, it’s still a manual folder.

Button Lock Confidence

The button lock is positioned at the pivot, letting you disengage the blade quickly without your fingers crossing the path of the edge. Collectors like this style because it combines modern safety with quick, clean operation. No liner to dig for, no back lock to fight—just press, fold, and you’re done.

Why It’s Not an Automatic Knife or Switchblade

This is where the mechanism distinction matters. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring to fire the blade open at the press of a button or switch. This Midnight Skeleton knife uses your finger power and a ball bearing pivot to open. The flipper is just a lever, not a trigger. The blade won’t deploy on its own, and there’s no internal drive spring pushing it out like on a true automatic knife or OTF knife.

Texas Carry Reality: A Folding Knife Built for Everyday Life

For Texas buyers, this style of folding knife fits right into everyday carry life. Texas law is friendly to knives, but it still pays to know what you’ve got in your pocket. This is a manual flipper folder, not a switchblade, not an OTF knife, and not an automatic knife. You’re opening it yourself, and that simple fact keeps a lot of conversations easy.

Pocket Clip and Skeletonized Handle

The deep-carry pocket clip tucks the knife low in the pocket, leaving just enough to grab without shouting for attention. The skeletonized black metal handle cuts weight and adds that modern tactical look without going overboard. It feels like something you’d carry to work in Houston, to the lease outside San Antonio, or to the feed store on a Saturday in West Texas.

Collector Value: Modern Tactical Folder With Clear Purpose

Collectors in Texas already have their share of automatic knives, OTF knives, and the occasional high-end switchblade. This Midnight Skeleton piece earns its place by doing one thing well: being a fast, reliable, manual folding knife you won’t hesitate to actually use.

The ball bearing flipper gives you the fidget factor and speed of an automatic knife without crossing over into spring-driven territory. The all-black drop point blade and skeletonized frame hit that modern tactical EDC look that fits right in beside more expensive folders in your case.

EDC Size That Actually Gets Carried

With an overall length around eight inches open and about 4.5 inches closed, this folding knife lands squarely in the sweet spot for Texas EDC. Big enough to work, small enough to carry daily. A knife that never leaves the house isn’t part of your real rotation; this one will ride clip-side more than it rides display-side.

How It Stacks Up Against Automatic and OTF Knives

Texas collectors usually have at least one automatic knife and an OTF knife in the drawer. This flipper folding knife belongs alongside them, but for different reasons. Where an automatic knife or switchblade is about push-button deployment and mechanical novelty, this piece is about smooth, controlled, manual opening with that same feeling of speed.

Compared to an OTF knife, this Midnight Skeleton carries slimmer, with fewer moving parts inside the handle. There’s no OTF track to keep clean, no internal firing bar, just a solid pivot, bearings, and a button lock. That simplicity is part of the appeal for buyers who like to work on their own gear.

Texas Law, Knives, and Where This Folder Fits

Texas knife laws have opened up over the last few years, and that’s given collectors more room to enjoy automatic knives, OTF knives, and even traditional switchblades. But a clean manual flipper like this still hits a sweet spot—easy to explain, easy to justify, and easy to carry across most everyday situations.

Because you’re physically moving the blade with the flipper tab, and there’s no spring firing it, this folding knife generally stays on the simpler side of the legal line. It’s the kind of piece you can clip into your pocket headed into town without a second thought, as long as you’re paying attention to local rules, posted signs, and common sense.

What Texas Buyers Ask About This Folding Knife

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

Mechanically, no. This Midnight Skeleton is a manual flipper folding knife. You start the blade with the flipper tab, and ball bearings let it glide open quickly. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring to drive the blade out when you hit a button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front through a track in the handle. This knife opens from the side, by hand, with no internal firing spring, even though it feels almost as fast in use.

Is a folding flipper knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law is generally friendly toward manual folding knives, including flipper folders like this one. Because it’s not a spring-fired automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade, it tends to be one of the simpler types to carry. That said, Texas still has location-based restrictions and posted signs you need to respect. Laws can change, so a Texas buyer should always confirm current statutes for blade length and restricted places before carrying any knife.

Why would a collector pick this over another tactical folder?

A serious Texas collector looks for solid mechanisms and clear identities. This knife offers a ball bearing flipper, button lock, deep-carry clip, and a skeletonized black metal handle in one clean package. It gives you the fast, satisfying action that automatic knife and OTF knife fans enjoy, but in a simpler manual folding format that you’re more likely to beat up and use. It fills a working slot in the collection instead of just a display slot.

In the end, this Midnight Skeleton Flip-Open EDC Knife is for the Texan who can tell you exactly why a flipper folder isn’t a switchblade, and why that difference matters. It’s a straightforward, modern folding knife that belongs in the pocket of someone who knows their knives, knows their laws, and knows that the piece they actually carry is the one that counts.