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Gilded Orb Court-Style Sword Cane - Gold/Black

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19.99


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Regal Orb Court-Style Sword Cane - Gold/Black

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1442/image_1920?unique=c7dec26

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This court-style sword cane is built for show, not street fights. The gold-relief handle and bright orb pommel ride above a black steel shaft, hiding a 15.5-inch unsharpened blade behind a secure threaded lock. At 42.5 inches overall with a rubber-tipped base, it works as a costume-ready walking prop with hidden sword aesthetics. In Texas hands, it belongs on stage, at cosplay events, or in a themed display where a little court drama goes a long way.

19.99 19.99 USD 19.99

SWCMKM150GD

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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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Regal Orb Court-Style Sword Cane for Texas Collectors

This isn’t a fighting stick and it’s not trying to be. The Regal Orb Court-Style Sword Cane is a theatrical, court-inspired walking cane with a hidden, unsharpened blade inside the shaft. Think ceremonial prop more than combat tool. Texas buyers who know their automatic knives, OTF knives, and classic switchblades will clock it immediately as a different creature: a display and cosplay piece that looks like old-world nobility, not an everyday carry.

What a Court-Style Sword Cane Actually Is

A court-style sword cane is built around presence. Here, you’ve got a slender black metal shaft capped with an ornate gold-tone handle and a bright orb pommel that catches the light across a room. Inside the cane runs a straight, unsharpened steel blade about 15.5 inches long, secured by a threaded connection where the handle meets the shaft. Twist, draw, and you’ve got a hidden sword aesthetic without a razor edge.

That’s an important distinction for Texas collectors who also own an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade. Those three are about rapid deployment and cutting performance. This sword cane is about visual drama, costume accuracy, and conversation value. It’s closer to stage steel than a work knife, and it should be treated that way.

Mechanism Details: Threaded Lock, Hidden Blade

The mechanism here is simple and honest. No springs, no buttons, no automatic action at all. The handle and blade section screw into the black shaft with a threaded joint and a brass-colored ring that gives a visual break between gold and black. When you twist the handle free, the inner blade slides out in one smooth, manual draw.

Why It’s Not an Automatic, OTF, or Switchblade

Texas knife folks like things called what they are. An automatic knife or switchblade uses a spring and a button or lever to throw the blade open. An OTF knife fires the blade straight out the front with that same automatic push. This court-style sword cane does none of that. The blade is fixed inside the cane, and you access it by unscrewing and pulling it free. No button, no assisted opening, no out-the-front deployment. That keeps it firmly in the sword cane lane, not in automatic knife or OTF territory.

Unsharpened Blade: Stage and Cosplay-Friendly

The 15.5-inch blade is intentionally unsharpened. That’s good news for cosplay, theater work, and themed retail in Texas where you want the look of a hidden sword without building a cutting tool. It gives costume designers, steampunk fans, and collectors a lot of visual payoff while keeping the edge more prop than weapon.

Court-Style Looks: Gold, Black, and Orb Drama

Visually, this piece leans all the way into court style. The gold-tone handle carries raised relief patterns that feel right at home in a European parlor or on a fantasy court set. The polished orb pommel is the star of the show—bright, eye-catching, and theatrical from the second you walk into a room. Below that, the slim black metal shaft and brass ring keep the profile clean and formal, finished off by a rubber tip for floor traction.

For a Texas collector who already owns a few automatic knives, maybe a favorite OTF knife and a classic switchblade or two, this sword cane fills a different slot in the collection. It’s the one you grab when you’re headed to a convention, a themed event, or you’re just dressing the part at home.

Texas Use, Carry Reality, and Context

Every state has its own take on blades, and Texas is friendlier than most—but that doesn’t mean you ignore the details. This court-style sword cane is a novelty and cosplay piece with an unsharpened blade, but it still hides steel inside a walking cane. That means you treat it with the same respect you’d give a fixed blade or a long automatic knife, even if it doesn’t open like an OTF or switchblade.

In practical Texas terms, this belongs:

  • On stage, in theater productions that call for a noble’s cane with a secret
  • At cosplay and steampunk events where ornate props are part of the uniform
  • In a display rack or stand alongside your knives, canes, and fantasy pieces
  • Behind the counter in a Texas novelty or knife shop as conversation-ready stock

It does not belong as a day-to-day walking aid, a defensive tool, or a substitute for a legal automatic knife you actually intend to use. If you want a working blade for Texas ranch life or city carry, you’re looking at a different shelf entirely—automatic knives, side-open switchblades, or an honest OTF knife with the spring to match the job.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Court-Style Sword Canes

Is a sword cane like this the same as an automatic knife, OTF, or switchblade?

No. An automatic knife and a switchblade both use a spring and a button or lever to snap the blade open from the handle. An OTF knife drives its blade out the front with that same automatic action. This court-style sword cane has a fixed, unsharpened blade hidden inside the shaft. You access it by twisting the threaded joint and pulling the blade free by hand. There’s no automatic deployment, no out-the-front mechanism, and no switchblade-style button—just a manual draw from a cane body.

Are sword canes legal to own and display in Texas?

Texas law has opened up a lot on blades, but cane swords and similar novelty weapons can sit in a gray zone, especially in certain locations or settings. This particular piece is unsharpened and built for stage, cosplay, and display, not as a fighting sword. Even so, a Texas buyer should still check current state and local rules before carrying it in public, just like they would when deciding how to carry an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade. On private property and in a home collection, it’s generally treated as a decorative or theatrical item—but you’re always responsible for knowing the law where you stand.

Where does a sword cane fit in a serious Texas collection?

In a serious Texas collection, this sits in the “showpiece” section. Your automatic knives and OTF knives handle fast deployment. Your traditional switchblades scratch the classic mechanism itch. This Regal Orb court-style sword cane anchors the theatrical side: steampunk builds, fantasy weapons, stage props, and ornate canes. The gold-relief handle, orb pommel, and hidden blade make it a natural centerpiece on a wall, by a display cabinet, or next to costume gear that comes out when it’s time to play a part instead of punch a time clock.

Why This Piece Belongs in a Texas Collection

A Texas knife collector doesn’t only buy for cutting power. They buy for story, mechanism, and presence. The Regal Orb Court-Style Sword Cane brings a different kind of satisfaction—a long, elegant silhouette, lavish court detailing, and the quiet knowledge that there’s steel inside the cane even if it’s unsharpened. It won’t replace an automatic knife in your pocket or an OTF knife on your belt. It doesn’t have to. It stands beside them as the courtly cousin, built for ballroom floors, convention halls, and display lights instead of work gloves.

If you’re the kind of Texan who can tell an automatic from a switchblade at a glance, and you like your collection to stretch from ranch-real to stage-ready, this sword cane earns its space. It’s a nod to old-world ceremony in a state that still appreciates a good entrance.