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Covert Stylist Hidden Comb Knife - Purple

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3.99


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Street Stylist Disguised Comb Knife - Purple

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/3150/image_1920?unique=d4409cb

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The Street Stylist Disguised Comb Knife looks like a simple purple grooming comb, but there’s a compact edge hiding in that handle. Slide it into a pocket, backpack, or console, and it blends right in with everyday carry items. The comb teeth actually work, while the 3-inch stainless blade stays out of sight until you need a discreet cutting tool. For Texas buyers who appreciate covert gear with a touch of color, this hidden comb knife does its job without saying a word.

3.99 3.99 USD 3.99

PK107PP

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 6.5
Blade Color Silver
Handle Finish Plastic
Concealment Type Comb

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What This Hidden Comb Knife Really Is

The Street Stylist Disguised Comb Knife looks like it belongs on a bathroom counter, not in a knife drawer. That’s the point. This is a hidden comb knife first and foremost: a plastic purple comb that actually grooms hair, with a compact stainless steel blade tucked away in the handle. You’re not buying an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a switchblade here – you’re buying a disguised edge that lives quietly in plain sight.

For Texas buyers who already know the difference between a true automatic and a novelty blade, this piece fills a different role. It’s a conversation-starting backup, a low-profile cutting tool you can carry where a full tactical knife would raise eyebrows.

Hidden Comb Knife vs Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

Mechanically, this comb knife couldn’t be further from an OTF knife or a side-opening automatic switchblade. There’s no spring-powered firing, no button release, no lightning-fast deployment. The blade is manually revealed from the comb body, more like a simple sheath or slip mechanism than any kind of automatic system.

That distinction matters. An automatic knife uses a spring to drive the blade open with a button or release. An OTF knife does the same, but straight out the front instead of out the side. A switchblade is the broader term people tend to use for side-opening automatics. This hidden comb knife doesn’t play in that arena. It’s a disguised, manually accessed edge that just happens to look like a grooming tool.

Mechanism: Simple, Manual, and Quiet

The mechanism here is straightforward: the purple comb body conceals a fixed-style stainless blade inside. You separate the comb section to access the knife. No springs, no sliders, no assisted opening. Collectors who own serious automatic and OTF knives will recognize this as a utility disguise piece, not a mechanism showpiece.

Why Collectors Still Care

Even if your main rotation is high-end switchblades and precision OTF knives, a hidden comb knife like this earns a spot for one reason: it demonstrates how far concealment design has been taken into everyday objects. It’s not about speed; it’s about how invisible a cutting tool can be when it looks like something you’d find in any glove box in Texas.

Texas Carry Reality for a Hidden Comb Knife

Texas has come a long way on knife laws, especially for automatic knives and so-called switchblades. Many blades that used to be restricted – including autos and OTF knives – are now legal to own and carry, with length and location rules doing most of the heavy lifting. A hidden comb knife like this usually flies under the radar, but that doesn’t mean the law disappears.

Texas buyers should think about three things: blade length, location, and intent. This comb knife runs a compact 3-inch stainless blade, which keeps it on the manageable side for most everyday situations. It’s not a massive fighting knife, and it doesn’t operate like an automatic knife or OTF knife, but you still treat it like a knife under Texas law. That means respecting restricted places – schools, certain government buildings, and other posted locations – no matter how harmless the purple comb disguise might look.

Discreet Doesn’t Mean Invisible to the Law

The fact that this hidden comb knife looks like a grooming tool is a practical advantage for low-profile carry, especially tossed in a bag, vehicle, or tackle box. But Texas collectors know: you never lean on disguise as a legal strategy. Whether it’s a true switchblade, an OTF knife, or a novelty comb knife, you carry it like a responsible adult who plans to keep it.

Design Details: Purple Comb Disguise, Stainless Blade

Visually, the Street Stylist leans all the way into the disguise. The purple plastic handle and wide-tooth comb head look like something you’d buy in a drugstore on your way out of town. There’s no tactical jimping, no skull logos, nothing that screams automatic knife or switchblade. That’s exactly why it works.

The 6.5-inch overall length keeps it in true pocket-comb territory. At about 3 inches, the stainless steel blade is enough for basic cutting tasks – opening packaging, light cord, small everyday chores – not bushcraft or heavy-duty work. Collectors who enjoy themed displays will appreciate how easily it anchors a "disguised weapon" or "novelty knife" section next to more traditional OTF and automatic knives.

Everyday Use in Plain Sight

If you carry it, it lives naturally in a purse, backpack organizer, console, or bathroom kit. Somebody glancing in sees "comb," not "knife." That’s the design win. And unlike some display-only gimmicks, this comb knife still functions as a comb, so it can justify its pocket space even on days when you never touch the blade.

Where This Fits in a Texas Knife Collection

Serious Texas knife people usually build out three main lanes: workhorse fixed blades, everyday folders, and a bench of automatic knives, OTF knives, and switchblades for when they want mechanism and action. A hidden comb knife like this doesn’t try to compete with your best auto or your slickest OTF. Instead, it rounds out the collection where disguise and surprise are the story.

Maybe you’ve already got the classic belt-buckle knife, the credit-card blade, or the lipstick knife. This purple comb knife slides right alongside them, giving you another example of how a blade can pass for something else. Having pieces like this turns your collection into a conversation about design choices, not just steel types and firing mechanisms.

Retail and Trade Value for Texas Sellers

For Texas retailers, flea market tables, gun shows, or small-town shops, this comb knife practically demos itself. Show a customer the comb, then reveal the blade, and the story writes itself. You can talk about how it compares to a true automatic knife without confusing the terms: "This one’s just a hidden manual blade – if you want a real switchblade or an OTF knife, those are over here." That clarity earns repeat buyers who know you’re not playing fast and loose with names.

What Texas Buyers Ask About Hidden Comb Knives

Is this like an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. This hidden comb knife does not function like an automatic knife, an OTF knife, or a classic switchblade. There’s no spring, button, or assisted mechanism. You manually access the blade from the comb body. It shares shelf space with autos and OTFs in Texas shops because collectors like all kinds of unusual blades, but mechanically it’s just a disguised manual knife.

Is a hidden comb knife legal to carry in Texas?

Texas law has become far friendlier to knives, including automatic knives and OTF knives, but you still need to mind the basics. This comb knife’s 3-inch blade is modest, and it’s not a spring-loaded switchblade, which helps. Still, it’s treated as a knife under the law. That means you avoid restricted locations, respect posted signs, and understand any local rules that might apply. When in doubt, Texas collectors check current statutes or talk to a local attorney instead of assuming the disguise makes it exempt.

Why would a collector add this instead of another auto?

A Texas collector buys this comb knife for the story, not the speed. You already have automatic knives and OTF knives that show off deployment and lockup. This one shows off how ordinary a knife can look. It’s the piece you hand to a friend and say, "Now tell me when you realize it’s a blade." That little moment of surprise is worth one slot in a drawer full of steel.

For Texans Who Know Exactly What They’re Buying

If you’re the kind of Texan who can tell an OTF knife from a side-opening automatic just by the sound it makes, you won’t mistake this for a switchblade. You’ll see it for what it is: a purple hidden comb knife that pulls its weight as a disguised, manual edge and a fun story in your collection. It won’t replace your favorite automatic knife, and it’s not trying to. It’s here to sit alongside the serious hardware and remind you that not every worthwhile blade announces itself on sight.