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Godfather Heritage Quick-Deploy Stiletto Switchblade - Wood

Price:

10.87


Hero Panel Display Set Mini Automatic Knives - Black Blade Aluminum
Hero Panel Display Set Mini Automatic Knives - Black Blade Aluminum
36.28 36.28
Godfather Heritage Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Wood
Godfather Heritage Stiletto Automatic Knife - Black Wood
12.75 12.75

Godfather Lineage Quick-Deploy Stiletto Knife - Wood Grain

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This Godfather-style automatic stiletto doesn’t ask for attention, it earns it. A polished 4.25" spear point snaps out with a clean push-button deploy, locked down by a safety when you want it quiet. The wood grain handle sits solid in hand, framed by classic bolsters that look as sharp as the blade. It rides as a display piece or working automatic for people who know the style, know the sound, and want that old-world stiletto profile in real steel and wood.

10.87 10.87 USD 10.87

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic Stiletto Knife Built for Collectors Who Know the Godfather Lineage

The Godfather Lineage Quick-Deploy Stiletto Knife - Wood Grain is exactly what it looks like at first glance: a classic Italian-style automatic stiletto with real wood scales, polished steel, and a push-button snap that feels right. No gimmicks. No plastic. Just a long, clean spear point blade and the traditional Godfather profile people ask for by name.

At 9.75 inches overall with a 4.25-inch polished spear point blade, this automatic knife sits squarely in the full-size stiletto category. Closed, it rides at 5.5 inches, with enough presence in pocket or case to feel substantial without being dead weight. At 5.4 ounces, it’s heavy enough to feel like a real knife, not a toy, and light enough to flip, carry, and display without fatigue.

Build Quality and Materials: Why This Automatic Stiletto Holds Up

The blade is polished steel, spear point, plain edge. No serrations, no tricks—just a clean edge that can be tuned to your preference. The polish isn’t just for looks; it gives the blade that classic reflective line collectors expect from a Godfather-style automatic knife.

Steel Blade, Traditional Stiletto Geometry

The blade’s narrow spear point profile is true to the old Italian stiletto pattern: long, straight, and purposefully tapered. That geometry is why people buy these knives—slim line, strong spine, and a point that tracks exactly where you put it. The steel takes a practical edge and holds it well enough for real use, not just glass-case duty.

Wood Grain Scales and Polished Hardware

The handle carries warm brown wood scales pinned with brass, framed by polished metal bolsters and pommel. The wood gives you real tactile feedback—no hollow, plasticky feel when you grip it. The finish is smooth but not so slick you lose control. The brass pins and polished bolsters give it that old-world stiletto look that cheap copies never quite nail.

The push button sits proud on the show side where it should, with a sliding safety switch along the handle. You can feel both without looking. That matters if you actually carry your automatic knives and don’t just line them up for photos.

Godfather-Style Automatic Knife for Serious Buyers

This isn’t a fantasy design or some over-branded tactical prop. It’s a straight Godfather-line automatic stiletto: long, lean, and unapologetically styled after the classic street and backroom knives that built the reputation of this pattern in the first place.

Collectors pick up this piece for three reasons: the look, the sound, and the action. The look is all heritage—polished steel, warm wood, and traditional lines. The sound is that sharp, decisive automatic snap when the 4.25-inch blade launches open. The action is pure push-button: press, deploy, lock. No flippers, no springs you have to baby. It opens with authority and closes back into a 5.5-inch profile that sits clean in a drawer, case, or waistband.

Legal Context for Automatic Knives: Adult Information, Not a Lecture

Automatic knives, including stiletto-style switchblades like this one, are fully legal to own and carry in many U.S. states, restricted or regulated in others, and heavily limited or banned in a few. That’s reality. Serious buyers already know their local landscape or take 60 seconds to confirm it.

States like Texas, Utah, and many others have opened up their knife laws over the past decade, explicitly legalizing automatic knives and switchblades for adult buyers. Other states still regulate blade length, carry method, or restrict autos to certain uses or holders. A smaller group treats automatic knives as prohibited or tightly restricted weapons.

The point is simple: this is a legitimate product with a real collector and user market. If you’re in a state where automatic knives are legal to buy, you’re making a clean, lawful purchase of a Godfather-style stiletto automatic. If you’re not sure, you check your state and local laws before you click buy. That’s how adults handle it.

Why This Godfather Automatic Belongs in a Collection

Collectors don’t just want “an auto.” They want a pattern that means something. The Godfather-style automatic stiletto has decades of cultural weight behind it—film, street history, everyday carry lore. This piece leans into that heritage with wood scales and polished hardware instead of tacticool clutter.

Size, Weight, and In-Hand Feel

At 9.75 inches open, this knife takes up real space in the hand. The 5.4-ounce weight gives it a grounded feel when you flick the button—there’s enough mass to make the deployment feel solid, not twitchy. The slim handle keeps it from feeling like a brick, and the wood grain gives your fingers something real to settle into. It’s the kind of automatic you flip open a few times and then find yourself doing it again purely for the sound and feel.

Display Presence and Everyday Readiness

No pocket clip. That’s deliberate. This is a stiletto that looks right in a display case, gun room, office drawer, or coat pocket. The profile reads instantly from across the room as “classic stiletto,” not generic folder. If you do press it into everyday duty, the plain-edge spear point blade handles the usual cutting tasks just fine, and the safety switch gives you control over when it’s live and when it’s locked down.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

In the United States, brass knuckles are legal to buy in some states, tightly regulated in others, and banned outright in a few. States like Texas and a handful of others have relaxed their weapons laws and allow brass knuckles for adult buyers, while places like California, New York, and a number of additional states still treat them as prohibited weapons. Many states draw lines between simple possession at home, open carry, concealed carry, and intent to use. Anyone searching for brass knuckles for sale should check both state statutes and local ordinances where they live, because the difference between legal collector gear and a charge can come down to one county line.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious brass knuckles are typically made from solid brass, steel, or high-grade alloys. Solid brass knuckles carry weight, impact density, and that unmistakable warm metal feel. Steel variants trade a bit of that old-school charm for higher overall strength and slimmer profiles. You’ll also see aluminum and other lightweight alloys marketed to buyers who want the shape without the full mass of solid brass. For collectors, material matters—solid brass or steel brass knuckles tend to hold value and command more respect than pot-metal novelties and cheap cast knockoffs.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you’re hunting brass knuckles for sale, start with material and build. Solid brass or solid steel, clean machining, no thin casting lines or brittle pot metal. Finger holes should be properly sized, with edges finished the way you want—smooth for comfort, sharper for aggression. Weight should match your intent: heavier for impact and display, lighter if you actually carry them. Finally, confirm they’re legal where you live and how you plan to keep or carry them. A serious buyer looks for real metal, real weight, and a seller who knows the legal terrain instead of hiding behind vague wording.

Confident Purchase for an Automatic Stiletto That Earns Its Space

If you’re looking to buy an automatic knife with real Godfather lines, this stiletto switchblade delivers: polished spear point steel, wood grain handle, solid 5.4-ounce weight, and clean push-button deployment with a safety. It belongs in the same case where you line up your blades, your brass knuckles, and every other piece that earned its keep. This isn’t a compromise buy—it’s the classic profile you were searching for, built to look right, feel right, and snap open with authority every time.

Blade Length (inches) 4.25
Overall Length (inches) 9.75
Closed Length (inches) 5.5
Weight (oz.) 5.4
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Wood
Button Type Push Button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Safety Switch
Pocket Clip No