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Lightbearer Orb Relief Steampunk Sword Cane - Copper

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19.99


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Orbward Legend Steampunk Sword Cane - Copper Handle

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1441/image_1920?unique=55dbffe

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The Orbward Legend Steampunk Sword Cane hides its edge in plain sight. A copper‑tone relief handle capped with a crystal‑style orb rides above a black walking shaft with rubber tip, looking right at home from Austin cosplay halls to a Hill Country display wall. Inside, a 15.5-inch unsharpened steel‑alloy blade waits behind a threaded lock, built for presence more than cutting. For Texas collectors who love concealed steel with a story, this is the cane that carries its own legend.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

SWCMKM150C

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Theme
  • Locking Mechanism
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 15.5
Overall Length (inches) 42.5
Theme Steampunk
Locking Mechanism Threaded
Concealed Length (inches) 15.5
Concealment Type Cane

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What a Steampunk Sword Cane Really Is

The Orbward Legend Steampunk Sword Cane isn’t trying to pass as an everyday walking stick. It’s a concealment sword cane for collectors who like their steel wrapped in a story. You’ve got a copper‑tone sculpted handle with deep relief, a crystal‑style orb pommel that catches the light, and a straight, unsharpened blade riding inside a black alloy shaft with a rubber walking tip. It functions as a cane, but its real job is display, costume, and conversation.

This isn’t an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. There’s no spring, no button, no side‑opening mechanism. The blade stays put until you spin that threaded connection and draw it free, like a gentleman duelist stepping out of a Victorian parlor. That clear distinction matters to Texas buyers who know their mechanisms and care about how the law sees each one.

Inside the Orbward Legend Steampunk Sword Cane Mechanism

Mechanically, this sword cane is simple and honest. The concealed 15.5-inch steel‑alloy blade runs straight and unsharpened, about 4mm thick, giving it spine and weight without pretending to be a combat saber. The blade section threads into the black shaft, locking up with a screw‑style connection instead of any automatic or OTF deployment.

Threaded Lock vs. Automatic or OTF Action

With an automatic knife, you hit a button and a side‑opening blade snaps out on a spring. With an OTF knife, the blade drives straight out the front of the handle, usually by a thumb slider or button. A classic switchblade is just a side‑opening automatic knife, even if folks throw the term around loosely.

This sword cane does none of that. You support the cane, twist to break the threaded lock, and manually draw the blade from the shaft. That slower, deliberate motion is closer to unsheathing a walking stick sword than firing a switchblade, and it’s one reason collectors treat it as a prop, a costume piece, and a display item—not a fast‑deploying automatic knife.

Build and Steampunk Detail That Earn Their Keep

The copper‑tone handle carries most of the visual weight: ornate relief work that looks right at home in a steampunk saloon or a Victorian magician’s kit. The clear orb at the pommel seals the mood—half lantern, half alchemist’s crystal. The black shaft keeps things grounded, with a smooth finish and rubber tip that make it usable as a light walking aid for cosplay corridors and convention floors.

Texas collectors tend to judge a piece like this on honesty: does it look like the photos, is the mechanism straightforward, and does it fill that steampunk sword cane niche without pretending to be a hard‑use combat tool? On all three counts, this one fits the bill.

How a Sword Cane Differs from an Automatic Knife or Switchblade

Knife folks in Texas get particular about terms, and rightly so. An automatic knife uses a spring to open the blade with a button or lever. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the nose of the handle. A switchblade is just the older, popular name for a side‑opening automatic knife. All three are about rapid deployment from a compact handle.

A sword cane like the Orbward Legend plays a different game. The blade is longer, the handle is a cane, and the concealment is built into the walking shaft itself. You’re not reaching for a pocket; you’re holding the handle, twisting past the threaded lock, and drawing the steel like a gentleman’s smallsword. That slower, theatrical movement is half the appeal for Texas collectors who already own their share of automatic knives and OTF knives and want something that reads more Victorian than tactical.

Where This Fits in a Texas Collection

Most serious Texas knife folks start with folders—EDC patterns, maybe a couple of automatics, and, sooner or later, an OTF knife or a classic Italian‑style switchblade. Once that drawer is full, the eye wanders to oddities and conversation pieces. That’s where this steampunk sword cane earns its spot.

It sits nicely next to fantasy blades, historical replicas, and custom canes. It’s the one you reach for when someone says, “Show me something different.” The copper‑tone relief and orb handle photograph well, the concealed sword construction is clear once unsheathed, and the threaded lock lets you walk folks through the mechanism without any surprises.

Texas Context: Sword Canes, Law, and Practical Carry

Texas law has shifted over the last decade, moving from a patchwork of blade‑length limits to a more open stance on what you can own and carry. Today, most knives, automatic knives, OTF knives, and even big fixed blades fall under a broader category of “location‑restricted” or generally legal carry, depending on where you are and what you’re doing.

A sword cane like this sits closer to the “novelty weapon” and “concealed blade” end of the spectrum. It’s your responsibility to know how Texas law treats concealed blades in canes where you live and where you plan to carry. Many collectors stick to home display, private land, and costume events that clearly allow prop weapons, treating pieces like this the same way they treat a display sword or fantasy axe—enjoyed, shown, and handled responsibly.

If you’re used to slipping an automatic knife or switchblade into your pocket and forgetting about it, a sword cane demands more forethought: where you’re walking, what kind of event you’re at, and how folks around you might read a concealed blade built into a cane. When in doubt, keep it as a home or collection showpiece and carry a legal automatic or OTF knife as your actual everyday tool.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Steampunk Sword Canes

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

Mechanically, it’s none of the above. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and button to snap a side‑opening blade into place. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out of the front of the handle. This steampunk sword cane has a fixed, straight blade hidden inside the cane shaft, secured by a threaded joint. You twist and pull to draw it out—no button, no spring, no switchblade‑style deployment. Think “concealed walking stick sword,” not pocket auto.

Is a sword cane like this legal to own and carry in Texas?

Texas has become more permissive about blade ownership, including many forms of automatic knives, OTF knives, and traditional switchblades. That said, sword canes raise extra questions because the blade is concealed inside something that looks like a simple walking aid. Laws can vary by city, by specific location, and by how an officer or judge interprets a “concealed weapon.” Most serious Texas collectors treat sword canes as home display and costume pieces, and they check current statutes—or talk to an attorney—before carrying one in public.

Who is this steampunk sword cane really for: users or collectors?

This one is squarely for collectors and costumers. The blade is unsharpened, the handle is ornate copper‑tone relief with a crystal‑style orb, and the mechanism is a simple threaded lock. It’s built to look right in a steampunk outfit, a fantasy photo shoot, or a Texas display case, not to out‑cut your everyday automatic knife or OTF knife. If you want a working edge, reach for a proper switchblade‑style auto or a solid fixed blade. If you want a walking cane sword that tells a story just by leaning in the corner, this fits the bill.

Why This Piece Belongs in a Texas Collection

Every serious Texas collection eventually steps past the usual suspects. You’ll always have room for a good automatic knife, a dependable OTF knife, and maybe a classic switchblade or two. But the pieces you talk about are the ones that refuse to fit into neat categories.

The Orbward Legend Steampunk Sword Cane lives in that space. It’s part walking stick, part concealed sword, part stage prop. The copper‑tone orb handle catches the eye, the straight hidden blade satisfies the steel itch, and the threaded concealment mechanism keeps the story grounded in real hardware. For the Texas collector who knows the difference between knife types and chooses each piece on purpose, this is the cane that says you’ve gone past basics and into character.