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Midnight Bloom Tribal-Skull Automatic Karambit - Matte Black

Price:

10.99


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Skull Bloom Quick-Strike Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black

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This automatic karambit knife brings tribal skull art and a blue rose bloom to a serious matte black talon blade. A side-mounted push button snaps the blade open, while the finger ring locks in control for reverse or standard grip. It rides light in a Texas pocket, clips clean on a belt, and still looks right at home in a display case. For the buyer who knows an automatic from an OTF knife, this is the skull piece that earns its slot.

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SB201SKW

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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Pocket Clip

This combination does not exist.

Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Talon
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Metal
Button Type Button
Theme Tribal Skull
Pocket Clip Yes

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What This Automatic Karambit Knife Really Is

The Skull Bloom Quick-Strike Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black is exactly what it says: a side-opening automatic knife built on a curved karambit frame. Press the button on the handle and the matte black talon blade swings out from the side on its own power. It is not an OTF knife, and it doesn’t pretend to be a classic Italian switchblade. It’s a modern automatic karambit, tuned for fast deployment and confident control with a finger ring.

Texas buyers who know their steel can see the difference right away. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front. A traditional switchblade is just a side-opening automatic with a certain style. This one is a purpose-built automatic karambit knife, with a tribal skull and blue rose theme that leans collector while staying fully functional.

Automatic Karambit Mechanism: How It Fires and Feels

This automatic karambit runs a simple, reliable button-fired mechanism. You’ve got a side-mounted push button on the glossy metal handle. Press it, and the spring drives that curved talon blade out and into lockup in one clean motion. No thumb stud, no flipper tab, no assisted opener halfway measures — this is a true automatic knife.

Side-Opening Automatic vs. OTF Knife vs. Switchblade

Mechanically, here’s where it sits:

  • Automatic knife: Side-opening, push-button, spring does the work. That’s this karambit.
  • OTF knife: Blade travels straight out the front of the handle, usually with a sliding switch.
  • Switchblade: Technically just another term for an automatic, but most folks picture the straight, bayonet-style Italian patterns.

This Skull Bloom piece gives you automatic speed on a karambit curve, which is something you won’t get from a typical switchblade or an OTF knife. The finger ring at the pommel anchors your grip, so once the blade fires, it’s not just open — it’s locked into your hand.

Control, Ring, and Blade Geometry

The karambit form puts the point down and forward in a hooked arc. That matte black talon blade isn’t for whittling sticks around a campfire. It’s for controlled pulling cuts, ripping through cord, tape, or packaging fast, and giving you a sure working edge when your wrist is bent and your footing isn’t perfect.

The finger ring keeps the automatic knife from shifting in your hand under pressure. You get jimping along the spine for thumb traction, so you can choke up and guide the blade. With the steel edge and the cutouts along the spine, you get a little weight savings without feeling cheap or hollow.

Texas Carry Reality for an Automatic Karambit Knife

Texas law is clear these days: automatic knives, OTF knives, and old-school switchblades are all legal to own and carry for most adults, with the usual common-sense location limits. That opened the door for knives like this automatic karambit to move from the back shelf into everyday rotation.

This piece carries like a pocket knife, not like a novelty. The pocket clip lets it ride along the seam of your jeans or on the edge of a work vest. The curved profile disappears against the leg, and the ring tucks in without glaring for attention. When you reach for it, you know where the ring is, you know where the blade will swing, and you know one press of that button brings the talon into play.

Whether you’re running a feed store counter in Waco, stocking shelves in Houston, or walking a ranch fence line outside Lubbock, this automatic knife gives you fast access with a secure grip. It’s not some loose OTF knife worrying you with an open front channel full of dust and grit. It’s a side-opening automatic karambit that shrugs off pocket lint and keeps running.

Collector Appeal: Tribal Skull, Blue Roses, and the Right Mechanism

Collectors in Texas don’t just buy on looks — but they don’t ignore them either. The handle on this automatic karambit knife carries a tattoo-style skull, wolf, feathers, and blue roses over a cool blue background. That tribal skull artwork reads like something you’d see on skin or a gas tank, not a discount rack. The gloss of the metal handle gives it a showpiece shine, while the matte black blade keeps the working side serious.

As a collector, the value in this piece comes from three lanes crossing:

  • Mechanism: True automatic knife, button-fired, not an assisted opener.
  • Form: Curved karambit with finger ring, not just another straight folder.
  • Art: Tribal skull and blue rose theme that stands out in a case full of plain black handles.

In a drawer packed with OTF knives, side-opening switchblades, and regular automatics, this one earns its place because of that combination. You know exactly what you’re grabbing when you pick up a karambit. You know exactly what you’re getting when the button snaps that blade open.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Automatic Karambit Knives

Is this automatic karambit an OTF knife or a switchblade?

This is a side-opening automatic karambit knife. The blade folds into the handle and then swings out from the side when you press the button. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front; this one does not. As for the word "switchblade," Texas law uses that term broadly for automatics, but collectors usually reserve it for the classic straight-handled styles. Mechanically, this is an automatic knife in a karambit shape, not a front-firing OTF.

Is it legal to carry this automatic knife in Texas?

Under current Texas law, automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades are legal for most adults to own and carry, with restrictions in certain sensitive locations and situations. Blade length categories still matter, and local rules or specific environments — schools, courthouses, some workplaces — can override what’s fine on the street. A buyer who knows their local rules and uses common sense can carry this automatic karambit like any other legal folding knife in Texas.

Where does a knife like this belong in a collection?

This automatic karambit belongs in the row where mechanism and art meet. It fills the gap between your workhorse automatics and your straight-laced switchblades. If you already have a few OTF knives, this gives you a different deployment and a different grip style. If your case leans tactical, the tribal skull and blue rose handle brings color and story without feeling like a toy. It’s the kind of piece you pull out when another Texan says, "Got anything different?" and you’d rather show than explain.

Why This Automatic Karambit Fits a Texas Knife Identity

Owning the Skull Bloom Quick-Strike Automatic Karambit Knife - Matte Black says you’re paying attention. You know the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and a switchblade, and you chose this one on purpose. You wanted a button-fired karambit with a solid steel edge, a finger ring you can trust, and artwork that looks as intentional as the grind on the blade.

It’s at home in a Texas pocket, on a Texas belt, or under Texas glass in a display case. It’s not the only knife you own, and it doesn’t need to be. It’s the automatic karambit you reach for when you want something that opens fast, locks into your hand, and looks like it has a story behind it — because it does.