Redline Heritage Field Hunter Knife - Red Wood
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This Redline Heritage Field Hunter Knife - Red Wood is built for Texas country. A full-tang 3CR13 clip point blade rides steady in hand, with polished steel for clean cuts and easy maintenance. The contoured red wood handle settles into your grip, brass accents and lanyard hole ready for real field use. On the belt in its nylon sheath, it feels less like new gear and more like the fixed blade you meant to carry on every hunt.
Texas Fixed Blades for Hunters Who Already Know the Law
In Texas, you don’t ask permission to carry a good fixed blade. You just decide which one earns space on your belt. The Redline Heritage Field Hunter Knife - Red Wood is built for that kind of Texas buyer—someone who knows their brass knuckles are legal here, their blades ride legal too, and they care more about steel, grip, and balance than out-of-state lectures.
This isn’t a toy and it isn’t a wall queen. It’s a 12-inch full-tang hunting knife with a 7.25-inch polished clip point blade and red wood handle built for real field work in Texas country.
Texas Field Confidence: Full-Tang Hunter Built for Work
Texas hunting season doesn’t care how pretty a knife looks online. It cares how it cuts when you’re tired, cold, and two hours from the truck. This field hunter is set up for that moment. The full-tang construction runs solid through the handle, so what you feel in hand is one continuous spine of steel—not a hidden stick tang waiting to twist or crack under pressure.
The 3CR13 stainless blade is polished and plain-edged, with a classic clip point profile. That means easy sharpening, corrosion resistance in Texas humidity, and a fine tip for controlled work—whether you’re opening up a whitetail, trimming cord at camp, or breaking down kindling. The polished finish doesn’t just look good; it wipes clean fast and shows you exactly what the edge is doing in the light.
Handle and Build Quality Texas Collectors Actually Notice
Texas collectors judge a fixed blade by the handle long before they talk about logos. The Redline Heritage Field Hunter carries contoured red wood scales, smooth-finished with dark striping that shows real grain and warmth—not cheap plastic pretending to be wood. Multiple brass pins secure those scales tight to the full tang, with a brass-lined lanyard hole at the butt for added security when you’re working around brush or water.
A black center section with diagonal metal spacers breaks up the handle visually and adds a refined, almost heirloom look—something you can gift to a Texas hunter and not feel like you handed them a hardware-store special. The integrated front guard is cut from the tang itself, giving you a real finger stop without adding rattling hardware or weak joints. It’s quiet quality: the kind of details Texas knife folks notice without needing them spelled out.
How This Field Hunter Rides on a Texas Belt
Every real Texas field knife needs a sheath that doesn’t fight you. This one ships with a belt-ready nylon sheath—light, tough, and simple. It sits on the hip without dragging your waistband down or twisting every time you get in and out of a truck. Nylon takes sweat, dust, and wet brush without complaint, and if it gets muddy, it rinses and dries without drama.
At 12 inches overall, this is a full-size field companion, not a pocket piece. That larger profile gives you reach for camp chores and leverage for tougher cuts, but the clip point shape keeps it controllable. On private land, at camp, or heading out to the blind, it feels right at home in Texas country.
Texas Brass Knuckles Culture, Texas Blade Standards
Texas brass knuckles law opened the door in 2019 for Texans to own and carry what used to be called "prohibited weapons." Texans learned the statute numbers, watched Penal Code 46.01 change, and started buying with confidence. That same mindset shows up in how Texas buyers look at knives: they know what’s allowed, they know what they like, and they expect sellers to keep up.
So while this Redline Heritage Field Hunter is a fixed blade, not a pair of Texas brass knuckles, it’s built to the same standard a serious Texas collector applies across their kit. Legal confidence is a given. Quality has to be proven. Full-tang strength, honest 3CR13 steel, real red wood scales, and a sheath you won’t be embarrassed to wear—that’s how this knife earns a spot next to your Texas brass knuckles and other carry pieces.
Texas Carry Context: Blades, Knuckles, and Common Sense
Texas has shifted from restriction to responsibility. Brass knuckles are legal here now, and fixed blades like this hunting knife ride with that broader culture of lawful, capable carry. Around camp, on private property, or during a hunt, this knife is exactly what it looks like: a field tool. Treat it that way and it fits neatly into Texas carry norms—no drama, no excuses, just work.
Why Texas Collectors Pair Blades and Brass Knuckles
Ask a serious Texas collector what sits on their dresser. You’ll hear the same mix: a favored pair of Texas brass knuckles, a primary fixed blade, maybe a folding EDC, all chosen for feel and function. This Redline Heritage Field Hunter slots cleanly into that lineup. It’s traditional enough for the old-school hunter, refined enough for a modern collector, and honest enough in materials that you don’t mind putting real miles on it.
Texas Brass Knuckles: What Buyers Need to Know
Are brass knuckles legal in Texas?
Yes. Brass knuckles are legal in Texas. In 2019, the Texas Legislature removed "knuckles" from the prohibited weapons list in Penal Code 46.01 and related sections. That change opened a fully legal market for Texas brass knuckles—buying, owning, and collecting them is lawful in this state. Texans asked the question, got the answer, and the law has stood since.
Can I carry brass knuckles in Texas?
Under current Texas law, you can lawfully possess and carry brass knuckles in Texas, including Texas brass knuckles designed for collection or personal defense. As with any tool, where and how you carry still matters—respect private property rules, posted policies, and common-sense boundaries like secured areas or venues with their own restrictions. But as far as the Penal Code is concerned, brass knuckles themselves are no longer contraband in Texas.
What are the best brass knuckles to buy in Texas?
The best brass knuckles to buy in Texas mirror the same logic you’d use choosing this Redline Heritage Field Hunter: material, build, and fit. Texas brass knuckles made from solid metal (brass, steel, or quality alloys), with clean machining, no sharp casting seams, and a hand-fit that doesn’t bite into your fingers, are what serious Texas buyers look for. Finish quality and balance matter as much as looks—just like a well-ground clip point and contoured red wood handle matter on this knife.
Texas Collector Identity: Blades, Knuckles, and Legal Confidence
Owning this Redline Heritage Field Hunter Knife - Red Wood isn’t about filling a drawer; it’s about tightening up a Texas-ready kit. The same legal confidence that drives the Texas brass knuckles market shows up here—you already know what’s allowed, so you focus on what’s worthy. Full-tang 3CR13 steel, polished clip point, real red wood, and a belt sheath that actually works. Quiet, capable, and built for Texas hands. That’s the standard.
| Blade Length (inches) | 7.25 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 12 |
| Blade Color | Silver |
| Blade Finish | Polished |
| Blade Style | Clip Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | 3CR13 Steel |
| Handle Finish | Smooth |
| Handle Material | Red Wood |
| Theme | None |
| Handle Length (inches) | 4.75 |
| Tang Type | Full Tang |
| Carry Method | Belt |
| Sheath/Holster | Nylon |