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Crimson Arc RidgeGrip Butterfly Knife - Red Blade

Price:

5.43


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Redline Arc RidgeGrip Butterfly Knife - Crimson Blade

https://www.texasbrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/3373/image_1920?unique=086cb10

13 sold in last 24 hours

Texas brass knuckles may get the legal spotlight, but Texas collectors know a sharp balisong belongs in the same case. The Redline Arc RidgeGrip Butterfly Knife pairs a crimson recurve blade with textured steel handles that lock into your hand when the flipping speeds up. At four inches of matte stainless, it balances light cutouts with real working edge. This is for the Texas buyer who likes their legal carry with attitude, and their collection pieces ready to move.

5.43 5.43 USD 5.43 8.15

BF203BR

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
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Texas Steel Culture: Where Texas Brass Knuckles and Balisongs Share a Case

In Texas, you don’t have to ask twice whether you can build a serious edge collection. Since 2019, Texas brass knuckles and modern knives have lived in the same legal lane: owned, carried, and traded openly by buyers who know their law and their steel. The Crimson Arc RidgeGrip Butterfly Knife fits that world exactly—bold color, hard lines, and a layout made for smooth flipping in a state that doesn’t flinch at serious hardware.

This isn’t a tourist piece. It’s a working butterfly knife with a crimson recurve profile that would look right at home next to a row of Texas brass knuckles on a glass shelf. Texas collectors look for two things: is it legal here and is it worth the space in the case? The answer to both is yes.

Texas Brass Knuckles Legal Shift and the Modern Edge Collector

When Texas brass knuckles went legal in September 2019, it did more than open one product category. It signaled that Texas was done treating hardened steel like contraband. Texas Penal Code changes around brass knuckles lined up with a broader attitude: if you’re a law-abiding Texan, you can own serious gear—knuckles, balisongs, tactical folders—without looking over your shoulder.

That’s the environment this butterfly knife lives in. A Texas buyer who knows the Texas brass knuckles law from 2019 forward doesn’t need hand-holding. You know your carry rights, you know the difference between a showpiece and junk, and you expect a seller who talks to you like you’ve read the statute yourself. This knife is spec’d for that buyer. The same cabinet that holds your Texas brass knuckles can hold a bright red balisong that flips clean and feels planted.

Build and Balance: Why This Butterfly Knife Earns Its Spot

The Crimson Arc RidgeGrip doesn’t try to hide what it is. Four inches of matte red stainless steel, cut into a recurve that sweeps forward with an aggressive clipped tip. The spine cutouts aren’t decoration alone—they shave weight so the blade tracks faster through flips, giving you that snap you want when the handles clear.

The handles are steel, dual-tone and perforated. The dimples and cutouts do two jobs: they drop weight and bite into your grip when your hands are moving fast. In Texas heat, when sweat tries to make everything slick, that textured RidgeGrip surface keeps the butterfly knife locked in without tearing into your palm.

A standard bottom latch keeps it closed when it rides in pocket or pack, and flared tang guards give your fingers a backstop when you’re running open-close patterns. This isn’t a loose novelty. It’s built to be flipped, passed around, and judged up close by people who own more than one knife—and probably more than one set of Texas brass knuckles.

Texas Brass Knuckles, Texas Knives, and Carry Reality

Texas carry culture is simple: know what’s legal, carry what fits your life, and don’t apologize for owning quality. Since the 2019 change that made brass knuckles legal in Texas, the same collectors who snapped up Texas brass knuckles started rounding out their loadouts with blades that matched that attitude. Bright, aggressive, but still functional.

Everyday Use in a Texas Context

This butterfly knife runs about 9 inches overall, 5.25 inches closed. That keeps it in the range where a Texas buyer can slip it into a pocket, bag, or truck console without treating it like a safe queen. The red blade draws the eye when you want to show it, but the dark handles keep it from looking like a toy. It’s a piece you can flip at the ranch table, in the garage, or behind the counter after hours and know you’re still on the right side of Texas law—same way you are with Texas brass knuckles since the law caught up to reality.

Collector Quality: Matching Your Texas Brass Knuckles Case

Texas brass knuckles collections have a certain look: weighty, intentional pieces, often with distinctive finishes and cuts. This knife is designed to sit comfortably next to them. The matte crimson blade plays off polished or blasted knuckle finishes, and the drilled handle lines echo the cutouts you see on modern Texas brass knuckles built for both display and grip.

For a Texas collector, value isn’t just price. It’s whether a piece tells the right story when someone picks it up. The Crimson Arc RidgeGrip says you care about balance and control as much as show. It flips clean enough for a beginner to learn on, yet looks sharp enough for a seasoned collector to keep out on the desk instead of buried in a drawer.

Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know

Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?

Yes. Brass knuckles have been fully legal in Texas since September 2019, when the Legislature removed them from the prohibited weapons list in the Texas Penal Code. A law-abiding Texan can buy, own, and trade Texas brass knuckles just like any other legal personal defense or collector item. That legal clarity is why the Texas brass knuckles market exists—and why it makes sense to pair them with serious knives in the same collection.

Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?

Under current Texas law, a legal adult can carry brass knuckles in public, the same way you can carry a modern knife or other legal defensive tool. Private property rules still apply—an owner can set their own policies—but Texas no longer treats brass knuckles as contraband. The same Texas buyer who confidently carries Texas brass knuckles can carry a butterfly knife like this one, provided you stay within general weapons and conduct laws.

What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?

The best Texas brass knuckles are built from solid metal with clean machining, no weak joints, and a finish that won’t flake off after a few weekends of real use. For Texas buyers, that usually means full-metal construction, no gimmicky hinges, and edges and contours that sit comfortably in the hand. The same logic applies to this butterfly knife: solid steel handles, a true stainless blade, and hardware that can handle being opened, closed, and flipped without wobbling out after a week.

Texas Collector Identity and the Crimson Arc RidgeGrip

Owning Texas brass knuckles and a balisong like this isn’t about pretending you’re somewhere else. It’s about being a Texas collector who knows exactly what the law allows and fills that space with steel that earns respect. The Crimson Arc RidgeGrip Butterfly Knife brings crimson flash, real balance, and working stainless into that mix. For the buyer who already understands brass knuckles legal Texas realities, this is the next logical addition—a knife that flips sharp, looks right beside your Texas brass knuckles, and fits the way Texans actually collect.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Blade Color Red
Blade Style Recurve
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Theme None
Is Trainer No