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Frontier Heritage Full-Tang Fixed Blade Hunting Knife - Bone & Green Pakkawood

Price:

15.00


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Carbon Weave Quick-Change OTF Utility Knife - Carbon Fiber
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Frontier Leafwork Bowie Hunting Knife - Bone & Green Pakkawood

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This fixed blade hunting knife doesn’t pretend to be anything it isn’t. A 7.25-inch satin clip point runs full-tang through carved bone and green pakkawood, locked in by a brass guard and pommel. At 12.25 inches and 15 ounces, it carries like a real camp knife, not a toy. The stitched leather belt sheath keeps it exactly where you need it—truck, pack, or bunk. Field-ready, bowie-bred, and clean enough to earn a spot in the collection.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
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  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
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  • Pommel/Butt Cap
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Frontier Leafwork Bowie Hunting Knife – Built Like Knives Used To Be

The Frontier Leafwork Bowie Hunting Knife is exactly what it looks like: a full-tang fixed blade built for real use, dressed in materials that still matter. A 7.25-inch satin clip point in stainless steel, 12.25 inches overall, 15 ounces of honest weight, carved bone, green pakkawood, brass guard and pommel, and a leather belt sheath that doesn’t need babying. This is a camp knife, a hunting knife, and a collection piece in one straight-talking package.

Full-Tang Fixed Blade Confidence in the Hand

There’s no mystery to why this knife feels right. The blade runs full-tang through the handle, brass to pommel, so what you get is one solid piece of steel, not a stick tang gamble. At 15 ounces, it has the kind of presence you can actually work with—quartering game, breaking down camp gear, or just riding on your belt as insurance when cheap tools fail.

The clip point profile gives you a fine tip for detail cuts while keeping plenty of belly for skinning and general field work. Satin finish on the stainless steel means it cleans easily and doesn’t look like a mall ninja toy. It looks like what it is: a proper bowie-style hunting knife.

Material and Build Quality: Why This Knife Earns Its Keep

Plenty of knives look the part in photos. This one backs it up with materials a serious buyer actually cares about. The blade is stainless steel with a satin finish—straightforward, easy to maintain, and tough enough for real camp work. No mystery coatings, no trendy gimmicks.

Carved Bone, Green Pakkawood, and Brass Hardware

The handle is where this fixed blade steps from basic into heritage. The front segment is carved bovine bone, cut with a leaf motif that gives real grip and old-world character. Behind it, green pakkawood brings stability, color, and grain you can see, not just a flat plastic look. Red spacers between bone, brass, and pakkawood give it a layered, deliberate build—nothing accidental about this layout.

A brass guard with finger quillon locks your hand in when you’re working wet or bloody, and the brass pommel caps the full tang cleanly. The whole package reads like a traditional hunting knife that someone actually thought through.

Leather Belt Sheath That Belongs at Camp

The included sheath is stitched leather with contrasting thread, belt loop, and a snap retention strap. That means this knife rides on your belt the way a field knife should—vertical, secure, and easy to draw without wrestling nylon or plastic. Park it on your belt, in the truck, or on the cabin nail and forget about it until you need steel in your hand.

Frontier Heritage and Bowie Roots

Look at the lines and you see it immediately: this is a bowie-inspired hunting knife, not a dainty kitchen transplant. The long clip point, brass guard, and leather sheath all nod straight back to American frontier camp knives—tools that split kindling, dressed game, and sat on the hip day in, day out.

Collectors pick up this style because it bridges utility and story. The carved bone inlay with leafwork gives it a touch of old-world craft, while the green pakkawood and red spacers keep it from sliding into gaudy. It’s the kind of fixed blade that looks just as right resting on a rack as it does buried in a stump at camp.

Legal Context: A Hunting Knife for States That Still Understand Tools

This is a fixed blade hunting knife, not a prohibited novelty. In most U.S. states, a full-tang bowie-style hunting knife like this is legal to own and keep at home. Where the law usually starts to split hairs is on carry—blade length, concealed vs. open carry, and specific city ordinances.

Plenty of hunters, campers, and outdoorsmen across the country carry similar fixed blades on their belt in the field without issue. That said, some states and cities cap blade length for everyday or concealed carry, and a 7.25-inch clip point isn’t trying to play under-the-radar. If you plan to carry it in town, check your state and local knife laws. If you’re buying it as a camp, cabin, truck, or collection knife, most jurisdictions don’t have a problem with a traditional hunting fixed blade sitting on your property.

Bottom line: this knife sits firmly in the hunting and outdoor category. You’re not buying a legal headache—you’re buying a straightforward field tool. Just match how you carry it to your local rules and you’re fine.

In-Hand Feel: Dimensions That Actually Work

The numbers tell the truth. A 5-inch handle gives enough room for a full grip, even with gloves. At 12.25 inches overall, the knife is long enough to baton small wood, reach into a carcass, or handle general camp chores without feeling like a short, twitchy blade.

The weight—15 ounces—puts it in the sweet spot: substantial enough for real work, not so heavy it’s a chore to carry. The carved bone texture and the contours of the pakkawood provide a grip that’s secure but not overdone. Brass guard and pommel add both balance and a bit of honest heft at the ends, helping the knife sit naturally in the hand.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

In the United States, brass knuckles sit under state and sometimes city weapons laws. Some states allow brass knuckles to be owned and bought but restrict how they’re carried. Others treat brass knuckles as prohibited weapons and ban sale, possession, or both. A smaller group has no specific law against simple ownership but may enforce broader weapons or concealed carry rules.

If you’re looking for brass knuckles for sale, you check your state first. States like Texas, for example, reversed older bans and now allow brass knuckles to be owned and carried. Other states, including California and New York, still treat them as illegal to manufacture, sell, or possess. Before you buy brass knuckles online, you match your shipping address and intended use with your local law. Adult buyers don’t guess—they verify.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious buyers look for brass knuckles cut from solid metal, not hollow toy-grade junk. Traditional pieces are made from solid brass, giving that dense, warm feel and the weight collectors expect. Modern versions expand into steel, aluminum, and occasionally titanium, each with its own balance of weight and durability.

Solid brass knuckles carry the classic profile and heft; steel brass knuckles tend to be slimmer but just as unforgiving. Aluminum pieces are lighter and easier to pocket but can feel insubstantial if you’re used to old-school hardware. Quality is simple: a one-piece body, clean machining, no sharp casting flash, and a finish—polished, matte, or coated—that holds up to handling.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, you start with legality, then move straight to build. First, confirm your state and local rules—are brass knuckles legal to buy, own, and carry where you live, or only to keep at home? Once that’s squared away, you look at material: solid brass, steel, or a properly machined alloy, not brittle pot metal.

Finger holes should match your hand: too tight and they’re useless, too loose and they shift. Edges should be clean, not razor-thin or jagged from bad casting. Finish matters—polished brass knuckles, parkerized steel, or bead-blasted metal all handle wear differently. Finally, decide if you’re buying a workhorse or a collector piece: heavy, plain solid brass for a classic user, or engraved, plated, or custom-shaped knuckles if you’re curating a collection.

Why This Fixed Blade Belongs in Your Rotation

The Frontier Leafwork Bowie Hunting Knife is the kind of fixed blade that doesn’t need hype. Full-tang stainless steel, satin clip point, carved bone, green pakkawood, brass hardware, and a real leather sheath—those details stand on their own. It works in the field, looks right on a rack, and carries like a proper hunting knife.

If you’re the kind of buyer who scrolls past gimmicks and wants steel, bone, brass, and leather lined up in one honest package, this is the piece that earns that spot. Add it to your kit and it’ll do what knives are supposed to do: show up, cut clean, and outlast the trend cycle.

Blade Length (inches) 7.25
Overall Length (inches) 12.25
Weight (oz.) 15
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Satin
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Bovine bone & Pakkawood
Theme Bowie
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full
Pommel/Butt Cap Brass
Carry Method Belt sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather