Skip to Content
Divine Strike Cross Cutout Brass Knuckles - Gold

Price:

9.99


Heritage Roadster Bolster-Release Stiletto Automatic Knife - Ivory
Heritage Roadster Bolster-Release Stiletto Automatic Knife - Ivory
16.99 16.99
Milano Marble Micro Stiletto Automatic Knife - Purple
Milano Marble Micro Stiletto Automatic Knife - Purple
10.99 10.99

Sanctuary Guard Buckle-Style Brass Knuckles - Gold

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1880/image_1920?unique=1f4eef2

4 sold in last 24 hours

These Sanctuary Guard buckle-style brass knuckles take the classic four-finger knuckle duster and cut a bold Holy Cross straight through the center. Polished gold metal gives it a ceremonial look, while the buckle-ready lower bar makes it easy to stage on a belt or in a display case. Compact in the hand but hard to ignore on the shelf, it’s built for collectors and retailers who want faith-forward hardware with real-world knuckle heft.

9.99 9.99 USD 9.99

PW495GD

Not Available For Sale

10 people are viewing this right now

  • Theme
  • Length (inches)
  • Width (inches)
  • Color

This combination does not exist.

Theme Holy Cross
Length (inches) 2.28
Width (inches) 4.16
Color Gold

You May Also Like These

Sanctuary Guard Buckle-Style Brass Knuckles for Texas Collectors

Some pieces feel more like a statement than an accessory. These Sanctuary Guard buckle-style brass knuckles are one of them. Four classic finger holes, a clean cross cut right through the center, and a polished gold finish that catches light before anything else in the case. This isn’t a knife, not an automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a switchblade. It’s a purpose-built brass knuckle designed for buckle carry, display, and serious Texas collectors who like their symbolism loud and clear.

Brass Knuckles with a Holy Cross Design and Buckle-Style Build

The first thing you notice is the cross. Not etched, not printed—cut out. That Holy Cross window in the center turns a familiar knuckle duster form into a faith-marked piece of metal. The four rounded finger holes give you a traditional brass knuckles grip, while the integrated lower bar makes it belt-buckle ready for those who collect and display hardware on leather instead of in pockets.

At roughly 4.16 inches wide and 2.28 inches tall, it fits the hand without feeling oversized. The polished gold finish leans more ceremonial than street, so it looks right at home next to collectible automatic knives, high-end OTF knives, and vintage switchblades in a Texas display case.

Centered Cross, Centered Grip

The cross cutout isn’t just decoration in the corner—it’s the visual anchor. Everything radiates from that shape: the four rings, the lower bar, the small stud above the center finger ring. Together they create a balanced silhouette that feels intentional, not novelty. It’s the kind of detail a Texas collector notices across the room, then steps closer to study.

Buckle-Ready Lower Bar

The straight, solid lower bar is what lets this piece do buckle duty. It gives you a clean horizontal run of metal that can be worked into a belt buckle setup or staged on a strap in a display. That bar also reinforces the frame, adding a confident feel when it’s in hand.

How These Brass Knuckles Fit into a Texas Collection

Most Texas collectors don’t stop at one category. You might have an automatic knife that lives in the truck, an OTF knife you carry on weekends, and a few old-school switchblades that only come out at the table. These brass knuckles don’t compete with any of that—they round out the story.

Where an automatic knife is about fast deployment and blade steel, and an OTF knife is about that clean, straight-line action, a knuckle duster like this is about presence. Solid metal. Grip. Symbolism. It sits in the collection as a conversation piece: the religious-themed brass knuckles in gold with a cutout cross and buckle-style frame.

Display Power Next to Knives

Put this piece between a dark-handled switchblade and a black OTF knife in a Texas display case and it instantly becomes the focal point. The shiny gold finish and cross motif break up all the usual blacks and grays. Retailers get a case anchor that pulls eyes; private collectors get a center-piece that makes the whole shelf look more deliberate.

Texas Law Context for Brass Knuckles and Defensive Hardware

Texas law has evolved over the years on what you can carry—automatic knives, switchblades, OTF knives, and even knuckles have all had their own chapters. Recent changes have made many formerly restricted items legal to own and carry in more situations, but local rules and specific circumstances can still apply. That means any Texas buyer who cares about compliance should check the latest state statutes and local ordinances for brass knuckles and related defensive tools before they ever ride on a belt or in a pocket.

This Sanctuary Guard piece is sold as a collectible and display item. Whether you keep it staged on a buckle, resting in a case next to your favorite automatic knife, or set on a shelf beside your first switchblade, treating it as part of your collection keeps the focus on appreciation, not escalation. As always in Texas, know the law where you live and use common sense.

Mechanism and Feel: No Blade, All Metal

Unlike an automatic knife or OTF knife, there’s no deployment here—no spring, no button, no slider. And unlike a switchblade, nothing folds or snaps out from a handle. These are fixed, solid brass knuckles: one piece of metal, four finger holes, one cross-shaped void. The only mechanism that matters is your grip and how it settles into the palm.

The smooth, rounded finger holes keep it from feeling abrasive when you slip it on. That small protruding stud above the center ring adds a touch of texture and visual interest, hinting at impact without turning the piece into something crude. It’s a reminder that this is still a tool form, even when finished like jewelry.

Gold Finish with a Purpose

Gold on a knuckle duster does two things. First, it makes it visible—no losing this one at the bottom of a drawer. Second, it shifts how people see it. In a Texas collection full of subdued tactical finishes, this polished gold brass knuckles piece reads almost ceremonial. For faith-minded buyers, that Holy Cross center and gold sheen can feel symbolic; for others, it’s simply a striking design choice that sets it apart from standard matte hardware.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Brass Knuckles

How are these brass knuckles different from an automatic knife, OTF knife, or switchblade?

They’re a completely different category. An automatic knife uses a spring or button to snap a blade open from the side. An OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front of the handle, usually with a thumb slide. A switchblade is a side-opening automatic knife, often with a classic lever or button. These Sanctuary Guard brass knuckles have no blade at all—just four finger holes, a cross cutout, and solid metal. If a buyer is searching for a knife, this isn’t it. If they’re looking for knuckles with a bold design to sit alongside their knives, this fits that lane.

Are brass knuckles like this legal to carry in Texas?

Texas has loosened many restrictions on automatic knives, OTF knives, switchblades, and knuckles in recent years, but law is never one-size-fits-all. State statutes, local rules, age requirements, and specific locations (schools, government buildings, events) can change what’s allowed. These brass knuckles are offered as a collectible and display piece for responsible adults. Before carrying them—on a buckle, in a pocket, or anywhere else—Texas buyers should check current state law and any city or county rules. Laws can and do change, and it’s on the owner to stay current.

Why would a serious Texas collector add brass knuckles to a knife-focused collection?

Because collections tell stories. A shelf full of automatic knives says you like modern mechanisms. A row of OTF knives says you appreciate engineering. A case of old switchblades says you respect history. Add a faith-themed gold brass knuckles piece with a Holy Cross center, and suddenly the story has another layer—symbolism, culture, and a different kind of hardware. Many Texas collectors like having at least one standout non-knife piece that still fits the defensive and EDC world. This buckle-style design does that job without stepping on the toes of your blades.

Built for the Texas Collector Who Knows What They’re Looking At

The Sanctuary Guard buckle-style brass knuckles are for the buyer who can tell an automatic knife from an OTF knife at a glance, and who doesn’t confuse a switchblade with a marketing term. You already know what this is and what it isn’t. You see the cross, the gold, the buckle-ready bar, and you’re thinking about where it would sit—in a belt rack, on a shelf, or next to your favorite Texas steel.

In a world where too many sites call every sharp or metal thing the same name, this piece stands as what it is: a gold, Holy Cross brass knuckles design built for display and grip. No fuss, no footnotes. Just a bold addition to a Texas collection that already knows the difference.