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Heritage Mosaic Full-Tang Hunting Knife - Bone & Rosewood

Price:

16.99


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Whitetail Heritage Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - Bone & Rosewood

https://www.texasautomaticknives.com/web/image/product.template/1472/image_1920?unique=5ae8f9b

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This fixed blade hunting knife is built the way Texas outdoorsmen like their tools: full-tang, balanced, and honest. A 3.75-inch satin clip point in stainless steel pairs with a brass guard and mosaic-pinned bone-and-rosewood handle for secure, all-weather grip. At 8 inches overall with a leather belt sheath, it rides easy from deer lease to back pasture. For Texas hunters who know a true full-tang hunting knife belongs on the hip, not in a drawer.

16.99 16.99 USD 16.99

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Sheath/Holster

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Blade Length (inches) 3.75
Overall Length (inches) 8
Weight (oz.) 9
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Bovine Bone & Rosewood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4.25
Tang Type Full
Pommel/Butt Cap Lanyard hole
Sheath/Holster Leather

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What a True Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Brings to Texas Country

This is a fixed blade hunting knife in the classic sense: full-tang steel from tip to pommel, a 3.75-inch clip point, and a handle built from real bone and rosewood. No springs, no assist, no OTF mechanism, and no switchblade button—just a solid, honest field knife meant to ride a belt and go to work. For Texas hunters who dress their own game, a knife like this is a familiar sight at the skinning rack.

At 8 inches overall, this fixed blade hunting knife sits in that sweet spot: big enough for clean field dressing on Texas whitetail or hog, compact enough for camp chores without feeling clumsy. The satin-finished stainless blade slips through hide and joint, while the brass guard and contoured scales keep your hand where it belongs when things get slick.

Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Mechanics vs. Automatic, OTF, and Switchblade

Mechanically, this is as straightforward as a knife gets: a full-tang fixed blade hunting knife. That means the steel runs the full length of the handle, and the blade is always exposed when out of the sheath. There’s no automatic knife spring, no OTF knife track, and no concealed switchblade-style deployment button. You draw it from the leather sheath, and it’s ready.

Texas buyers who know their mechanisms understand why that matters. An automatic knife snaps open with a button; an OTF knife drives the blade straight out the front along rails; a classic switchblade is a side-opening automatic. All of those rely on internal hardware. This fixed blade hunting knife relies on one thing: solid tang and good steel. Less to fail, more to trust when you’re elbow-deep in a deer on the lease and daylight’s fading.

Full-Tang Strength You Can Feel

The full tang is visible between the bone and rosewood handle scales, pinned with mosaic hardware. That’s not just decoration for collectors—it’s a structural choice. A full-tang fixed blade hunting knife like this resists torque when you’re twisting through a joint or splitting the brisket, where a folding knife, automatic knife, or switchblade might complain at the pivot.

Clip Point Control in the Field

The clip point profile gives you a fine, narrow tip for careful work—unzipping a whitetail from brisket to sternum, working in around the hocks, or slipping under hog hide without punching the guts. The plain edge and satin finish keep maintenance simple: a stone, a strop, and you’re back in business.

How This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Rides in Texas

This knife was built to live on a belt. The leather sheath carries it snug against the hip, right where Texas hunters expect their fixed blade hunting knife to sit. On the deer lease, in the Hill Country, down in the brush country, or walking fence lines on a Panhandle ranch, a full-tang fixed blade is still the first tool many Texans reach for.

Unlike an automatic knife or OTF knife that might bounce around clipped inside a pocket, a traditional fixed blade hunting knife stays put in its sheath, easy to reach with cold or bloody hands. The lanyard hole at the pommel gives you the option to tie it off or hang it up in the skinning shed between jobs.

Texas Law and Fixed Blade Carry Reality

Under current Texas law, this fixed blade hunting knife falls into the "location-restricted knife" category because of its blade length, just like a big folder, automatic knife, or even some switchblade designs. You can own it, carry it openly, and use it on your own property, at camp, on the lease, or in most everyday settings. Some sensitive locations in Texas still restrict blades over 5.5 inches or certain carry contexts, so it’s always wise to know where you’re headed.

For most Texas outdoorsmen, this knife lives in the truck, on the belt at the lease, or in a pack—right alongside a smaller pocket folder or even an automatic knife that handles day-to-day cutting. The fixed blade hunting knife comes out when there’s a carcass hanging or real work on the table.

Bone, Rosewood, and Mosaic Pins: Collector Appeal in a Working Knife

Collectors in Texas appreciate when a working fixed blade hunting knife doesn’t look like an afterthought. The handle on this one pairs creamy bovine bone with dark rosewood at the ends, framed by a brass guard up front and a clean tang line running the length. Mosaic pins lock it all down, adding a subtle custom touch without getting loud or tactical.

The deer head etch on the blade speaks plainly to its job. This isn’t an OTF knife built for fidget factor or an automatic knife you flip open just to hear it snap. It’s a hunting knife that earns its keep in November and still looks right laid out on a workbench next to spent brass and a worn-out license.

Stainless Steel for Texas Conditions

Stainless steel may not have the romance of old high-carbon, but in Texas heat and humidity it earns respect. Blood, damp leather, and sweat are rough on tools. This stainless fixed blade hunting knife shrugs off rust better than many carbon-blade switchblade or automatic knife options, especially when they sit forgotten in a tackle box or truck console.

What Texas Buyers Ask About a Fixed Blade Hunting Knife

Is a fixed blade hunting knife like this the same as an automatic, OTF, or switchblade?

No. This is a true fixed blade hunting knife: the blade is fixed in place and doesn’t fold or retract. An automatic knife uses a spring to open the blade from a closed position with a button or lever. A switchblade is a common term for those side-opening automatic knives. An OTF knife sends the blade straight out the front of the handle along internal tracks. This knife does none of that—it’s just solid steel, handle scales, and a sheath. You draw it, use it, clean it, and put it back.

Is this fixed blade hunting knife legal to carry in Texas?

In Texas, owning a fixed blade hunting knife like this is legal, and carrying it is generally legal for most adult Texans in most places, especially in outdoor and hunting contexts. Some locations—like certain schools, government buildings, or secured venues—may restrict knives over specific lengths, whether they’re fixed, automatic, OTF, or classic switchblade style. It’s on the owner to know and follow local and location-based rules. Around the ranch, at the deer lease, or in camp, this knife is right at home.

Why would a collector choose this over a fancier automatic or OTF knife?

A serious Texas collector doesn’t stack a fixed blade hunting knife against an automatic knife or OTF knife as an either-or choice; they sit in different roles. A piece like this earns its spot because it’s a full-tang field knife with heritage styling—bone, rosewood, brass, and mosaic pins—at a size that actually gets used. It’s the one you loan a nephew for his first deer, the one that keeps coming back to camp season after season. Automatic and switchblade designs scratch the mechanical itch; this scratches the tradition itch and still pulls weight in the field.

Why This Fixed Blade Hunting Knife Belongs in a Texas Collection

If your drawer already holds more than a few automatics, maybe an OTF knife or two, and the odd old switchblade you’re proud of, this fixed blade hunting knife fills a different gap. It’s a working piece with just enough dress to make you smile every time you slide it from that leather sheath. Full tang, clip point, stainless steel, bone and rosewood—none of it is flashy, all of it is right.

A Texas collector who knows their knife types doesn’t confuse this with an automatic knife or OTF knife, and that’s the point. This is the knife that reminds you why knives existed long before springs and sliders. It looks right on a belt, feels right in the hand, and fits right into a Texas life where hunting season and everyday chores still matter more than trends.