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Marble Mirage Quick-Deploy Stiletto - Pearl White

Price:

11.99


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Pearl Mirage Quick-Assist Stiletto Knife - White Inlay

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/700/image_1920?unique=783b04a

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This spring assisted stiletto knife blends dress-knife polish with street-ready speed. The Marble Mirage carries a two-tone spear point, dual flipper guards, a liner lock, and a pocket safety slider that keeps things honest. At 5 inches closed and 9.25 overall, it rides slim, opens decisively, and fits right into a Texas pocket—whether you’re headed to the lease, the jobsite, or downtown. For collectors who know the difference between an assisted opener, an automatic knife, and an OTF, this one earns its spot.

11.99 11.99 USD 11.99

A108PB

Not Available For Sale

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Handle Finish
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip
  • Deployment Method
  • Lock Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 9.25
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Two-tone
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Handle Finish Glossy
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety lock
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Flipper tab
Lock Type Liner lock

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The Marble Mirage Quick-Deploy Stiletto - Pearl White is a spring assisted stiletto knife that looks ready for a black-tie evening and opens like it’s on a mission. It’s not an automatic knife, it’s not an OTF knife, and it’s not a classic switchblade—even though the silhouette might fool a casual buyer. This is an assisted opening stiletto built for Texans who know their mechanisms and don’t confuse style with weakness.

What this spring assisted stiletto knife really is

Mechanically, this is a folding assisted opening knife with a flipper tab, tuned coil assist, and a liner lock. You start the blade with light pressure on the flipper, the spring takes over, and the spear point snaps into lockup. That makes it a spring assisted stiletto knife, not a push-button automatic knife and not an out-the-front (OTF) knife where the blade rides in a channel and fires straight out the handle.

In plain terms: it carries like a gentleman’s stiletto, opens like a hard-use assisted EDC, and locks up with the kind of certainty Texas buyers expect when they put something in their pocket for the long haul.

Spring assisted stiletto knife mechanics in real-world Texas carry

The Marble Mirage lives on that line between dress and duty. At 5 inches closed and 9.25 inches overall, it qualifies as a full-size Texas pocket companion without feeling clumsy. The spring assisted mechanism is tuned for a clean, decisive snap—not a wild kick—so you get reliable deployment whether you’re bare-handed at a desk or gloved up on a ranch gate.

The dual flipper guards do double duty: they get the spring assisted stiletto knife moving, then act as finger quillons once the blade is open. Add the liner lock biting behind that two-tone spear point, and you’ve got a setup that feels sure when you’re slicing straps, breaking down boxes, or trimming cord in the shop.

How it differs from an automatic knife or OTF knife

An automatic knife fires from a button or lever—press, and the blade drives open under spring pressure. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle. This Marble Mirage is neither. It’s an assisted opener: you start the motion with the flipper, then the spring helps you finish fast. That gives you automatic-like speed with more control at the start and a profile that stays slimmer in the pocket than most OTF knives or bulky switchblades.

Control, safety, and that pocket slider

Texas buyers notice details. The safety slider on the handle is there for one reason: to keep this spring assisted stiletto knife from opening when it shouldn’t. Slide it on before you clip it into a boot, waistband, or pocket, and that flipper tab won’t accidentally fire if something catches it. Once you’re ready to use it, flick the safety off and the assist is standing by, ready to do its work.

Spring assisted stiletto knife design with collector-grade presence

The stiletto theme is obvious: long spear point, tapered handle, slim profile. What sets this piece apart is how it wears that look. The two-tone black spear point blade has a satin grind line that guides the eye right to the tip, while the pearl white marble-look inlay anchors the back of the handle with a dressy, almost formal contrast. It’s an elegant tactical presentation—half Italian-inspired stiletto, half modern EDC knife.

Glossy black steel scales, torx screw construction, and that pearl white inlay make it stand out in a display case. But it’s not a glass-queen. The frame is steel, the liner lock is robust, and the spear point’s plain edge is meant for work: slicing packaging, cutting rope, trimming materials in a garage, or handling day-to-day chores wherever you hang your hat in Texas.

EDC-ready stiletto dimensions

With a 4.25-inch blade, you get a long, controlled cut without feeling like you’ve got a short sword in your pocket. Closed, at 5 inches, it rides low and slim thanks to the deep-carry pocket clip. It’s a spring assisted stiletto knife that disappears when you’re moving through your day and reappears with a single, confident flip.

Two-tone spear point that means business

The spear point profile gives you a fine, centered tip and a long cutting line. The black coating with that satin grind line isn’t just for looks—it helps hide everyday wear while still reading as premium when a collector picks it up. The edge is plain, which Texan knife users tend to prefer when they sharpen their own steel and want predictable behavior on a stone.

Texas law, everyday carry, and the spring assisted stiletto knife

Texas has grown friendlier to knives over the years, especially for adults, but serious buyers still want clarity. A spring assisted stiletto knife like this Marble Mirage is a folding assisted opener, not a classic push-button switchblade and not an OTF knife. That distinction matters to collectors who follow Texas knife law closely, especially when they’re comparing an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener for different carry situations at home, in the truck, or around town.

Within Texas, many knife restrictions that once singled out switchblades and automatic knives have eased, but responsible carry is still the mark of a grown adult. The safety slider, liner lock, and flipper-based deployment on this assisted stiletto make it a thoughtful choice for Texans who want quick access without needless drama. It feels at home in a pocket at a small-town hardware store, on a ranch fence line, or in a Houston high-rise parking garage.

Where this assisted stiletto sits among your other knives

If you already own an OTF knife for pure mechanical fascination, and a push-button automatic knife for that classic switchblade snap, this Marble Mirage fills a different role. It’s the spring assisted stiletto knife you slip into your jeans when you want a little flash, a lot of control, and a mechanism that’s fast but doesn’t shout for attention.

Compared to a manual flipper, this assisted opener gives you a more decisive deployment, especially when your thumb is cold, wet, or gloved. Compared to a true automatic knife, it gives you similar speed while requiring that deliberate flipper start—something many Texas carriers appreciate when they’re opening a knife around coworkers, family, or customers.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Spring Assisted Stiletto Knives

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

Mechanically, no. A classic switchblade or automatic knife uses a button or lever that fires the blade open on its own. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front. This Marble Mirage is a spring assisted stiletto knife: you start the blade with the flipper tab, and the spring helps it snap the rest of the way. You get similar speed, but more control and a traditional folding layout that many Texas collectors prefer for everyday carry.

Is a spring assisted stiletto knife like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has become much friendlier to knives in recent years, and many past restrictions on switchblades and automatic knives have been lifted for adults. That said, you’re still responsible for knowing current Texas statutes and any local rules where you live or travel. This Marble Mirage is a folding assisted opener, not an OTF knife and not a push-button automatic, which is exactly the kind of mechanical distinction serious Texas buyers pay attention to. When in doubt, check the latest Texas knife laws or talk with a knowledgeable local dealer.

Why would a collector add this assisted stiletto if they already own automatics?

Because it fills a gap. The Marble Mirage is where dress-knife looks meet spring assisted practicality. The pearl-white inlay and two-tone spear point deliver display-case presence, while the flipper tab, liner lock, and safety slider make it a working EDC. In a drawer full of OTF knives and automatic knives, this spring assisted stiletto knife stands out as the piece you can carry to dinner, lend to a friend without worry, and still enjoy every time that assisted action snaps into place.

For the Texas collector who can tell an automatic knife from an assisted opener with their eyes closed, the Marble Mirage Quick-Deploy Stiletto - Pearl White feels like a knowing choice. It’s not trying to be every type of knife at once. It’s a spring assisted stiletto knife with clean lines, honest steel, and a mechanism you’ll trust long after the new has worn off. Slip it into a pearl-snap shirt pocket, a pair of work-worn jeans, or a suit coat—it belongs wherever a Texan who knows their knives decides to carry it.