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Skyline Ported Quick-Assist Stiletto Knife - Azure Blue

Price:

10.99


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Skyline Ported Quick-Assist Stiletto Blade - Azure Blue Steel

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/7205/image_1920?unique=7c9ad0a

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This assisted opening stiletto knife brings skyline flash to Texas pocket carry. A 4-inch azure blue dagger-style stainless blade snaps open with a quick-assist flipper and locks on a liner, giving you automatic-like speed without being an automatic knife. The ported blue steel handle trims weight and adds grip, while the deep-carry clip keeps this stiletto low-profile in jeans or boots. For Texas collectors who know their mechanisms, it’s a modern, bright-blue statement piece that still works as a practical EDC.

10.99 10.99 USD 10.99

PF29BL

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

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5
Blade Color Blue
Blade Finish Glossy
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Steel
Theme Stiletto
Pocket Clip Yes
Deployment Method Spring-assisted
Lock Type Liner lock

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Skyline Ported Stiletto: An Assisted Opening Knife Done Right

The Skyline Ported Quick-Assist Stiletto Blade - Azure Blue Steel is a true assisted opening knife with a stiletto profile, not an automatic knife and not an OTF knife. You start the motion with the flipper tab, the spring does the rest, and the liner lock holds it in place. For Texas buyers who know the difference between a switchblade, an OTF knife, and an assisted opener, this piece hits that sweet spot of quick, legal, and eye-catching.

Visually, it reads like a classic Italian-style stiletto—long, slim, and built around a dagger-style blade—but the mechanism is pure modern spring-assisted design. That mix of old silhouette and new engine is what makes it interesting in a serious Texas collection.

Assisted Opening Stiletto Knife Mechanics, in Plain Texas English

This assisted opening knife works off a simple idea: you stay in control. You nudge the flipper, the internal spring takes over, and the 4-inch dagger blade drives cleanly to lock-up with a crisp click. Unlike a true automatic knife or switchblade, you have to start the opening action—there’s no button that fires the blade from a dead stop.

How This Mechanism Differs from OTF and Switchblade Designs

With an OTF knife, the blade rides in a track and comes straight out the front when you push a thumb slider. A side-opening automatic switchblade uses a button to fire the blade from the side without any help from your wrist or fingers. This Skyline is neither of those. It’s a folding stiletto with a spring-assisted flipper. The blade pivots out of the handle like a standard folding knife, just faster and smoother thanks to the assist. That gives you near-automatic speed while staying firmly in the assisted opening category.

Stiletto Profile, Everyday Carry Reality

The Skyline’s stiletto theme shows in the slim, dagger-style blade and straight, narrow handle. At 9 inches open and 5 inches closed, it carries like a full-size folder but slips into the pocket more like a pen. The azure blue blade and matching glossy handle are pure show, but the plain edge and stainless steel construction mean it’s more than a shelf queen. You get a clean cutting edge for packages, cord, and daily tasks, wrapped in a silhouette that owes more to old-school street stilettos than to a basic pocket knife.

Texas Carry Context: Assisted Opening Knives, Not Automatics

Texas has come a long way on knife laws, and Texans have long memories about what used to be called a switchblade. Today, an assisted opening knife like this Skyline sits in a different mental bucket than a classic automatic knife or an OTF switchblade. You’re still working a folding knife that needs your touch to start the action, not a push-button automatic that does all the work.

That distinction matters for Texas collectors who like to carry what they collect. Many buyers want the fast deployment they associate with a switchblade or OTF knife, but prefer the more familiar feel and pocket presence of a flipper-assisted folder. This stiletto-style assisted opener fits that Texas carry lifestyle: fast from the pocket, slim in jeans, easy to clip inside a boot or under a work shirt hem when you’re off the clock.

Design Details Texas Collectors Notice

Ported Steel Handle and Deep-Carry Clip

The ported handle is more than decoration. Those circular holes in the blue steel handle cut a bit of weight and give your fingers natural indexing points. When you draw from pocket, your grip finds those ports the same way your hand finds checkering on a revolver grip. The deep-carry pocket clip rides high on the spine side so the knife sits low in the pocket—less flash until you want the flash.

Azure Blue Dagger Blade with Liner Lock

The dagger-style blade shape, with its central spine and symmetric profile, nods to traditional stilettos and automatic switchblades, but this is a single plain edge suited to real-world cutting. The glossy azure blue finish carries down the blade and handle, turning the whole knife into one bold streak of color. The liner lock is straightforward, easy to close one-handed, and familiar to anyone who’s carried a modern assisted opening knife before.

Automatic Knife, OTF Knife, or Assisted Stiletto? Why It Matters

To a casual buyer, anything that opens fast looks like a switchblade. Texas collectors know better. An automatic knife uses a button or hidden actuator to drive the blade out with a spring. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front along a track. This Skyline is an assisted opening stiletto knife: you hit the flipper, the internal spring assists the pivot, and the blade snaps into place. It’s a folding mechanism first, tuned for speed.

That difference defines how you’ll use it. If you want the straight-line deployment and double-action play of an OTF knife, this isn’t that. If you want push-button automatic deployment, this isn’t that either. If you want a fast, familiar folder with the attitude of a switchblade and the comfort of an EDC, this is right in that lane.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Assisted Opening Stiletto Knives

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

Mechanically, it’s closest to a modern assisted opening knife, not a true automatic knife, not an OTF knife, and not a traditional push-button switchblade. You still pivot the blade on a side hinge like any folding knife, using the flipper tab. The internal spring just helps finish the job. The look—stiletto shape, dagger-style blade, bright finish—borrows from classic switchblades, but the working parts are all assisted opener.

How does this assisted opening stiletto fit Texas knife laws?

While knife laws can change and you should always check current Texas statutes for yourself, this design falls into the assisted opening knife camp, not the automatic OTF knife or classic switchblade category. There’s no button that launches the blade straight out of the handle; you start the opening and the assist finishes it. Many Texas buyers choose assisted opening knives like this because they deliver nearly automatic speed while staying in that more traditional folding-knife lane. When in doubt, know your local rules and carry accordingly.

Where does this piece belong in a serious Texas collection?

This is the knife you put between your workhorse EDC folders and your full-on automatic switchblades and OTF knives. It carries like a modern assisted opening knife, looks like a custom-colored stiletto, and fills the gap when you want something faster and flashier than a basic folder, but not as specialized as a dedicated OTF knife. For Texas collectors who sort their drawer by mechanism, profile, and purpose, the Skyline sits in the “fast stiletto folder” row—an everyday carry piece with just enough show to earn its spot.

Texas Collector Identity, One Azure Stiletto at a Time

Owning the Skyline Ported Quick-Assist Stiletto Blade - Azure Blue Steel says you know what you’re carrying and why. You understand the difference between an automatic knife, an OTF knife, and an assisted opening stiletto, and you chose this one on purpose. It’s long, bright, and unapologetically modern, but it still folds, clips, and rides like a practical Texas pocket knife. For a collector who’s tired of sites calling everything a switchblade, this is one more piece that proves you’ve done your homework—and your collection shows it.