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Classic Officer’s Commando Dagger Knife - Wood & Brass

Price:

7.31


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Old-World Commando Field Dagger - Steel/Wood

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The Old-World Commando Field Dagger - Steel/Wood is built like the blades that rode on real belts, not in display catalogs. Full-tang steel, a 7-inch double-edged dagger blade, and a brass guard meet smooth timber scales that actually feel alive in the hand. At 11.5 inches overall and 6.53 oz, it balances fast without feeling flimsy. The hand-stitched leather sheath finishes the package. No nonsense, no fluff — just a classic field dagger that earns its spot in your kit.

7.31 7.31 USD 7.31

FX203363

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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
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

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Old-World Commando Field Dagger for Buyers Who Don’t Play Dress-Up

The Old-World Commando Field Dagger - Steel/Wood is exactly what it looks like: a classic double-edged field blade with real steel, real timber, and hardware that doesn’t pretend to be anything it isn’t. At 11.5 inches overall with a 7-inch dagger blade and full-tang construction, this is a fixed blade built to be carried, handled, and respected — not posed for social media and forgotten in a drawer.

Fixed Blade Dagger Built on Full-Tang Steel and Wood

Start with the spine: this is a full-tang steel dagger. The tang runs clean through the handle, framed by smooth wood scales and locked down with visible rivets. That alone separates it from the usual hollow-handled trash that bends when you actually put a load on it.

The 7-inch blade is a classic dagger profile — double-edged, central spine, and a polished silver finish that shows every grind line and edge transition. No blackwash, no faux tactical coating to hide shortcuts. If the edge geometry is sloppy, you see it. On this one, you don’t.

Steel Dagger Blade with Polished Finish

The blade is straight steel with a polished finish. That matters for two reasons: you can see the quality of the grind, and you can maintain it without fighting through a gimmick coating. Double edges taper cleanly to a point meant to pierce, not just pose. The central spine adds rigidity down the length so the 7-inch reach doesn’t feel whippy or cheap.

Wood Handle, Brass Guard, and a Real Working Grip

The handle is smooth brown wood with visible grain, shaped to fill the hand without any silly tactical scallops. Five metal rivets tie it into the full tang. At the front, you get a brass crossguard with a slight curve — old-world, military-inspired, and actually functional when things get slick. At the back, an exposed steel pommel with a lanyard hole gives you options for carry and retention without gimmicks.

Leather-Sheathed Commando Dagger for Real-World Carry

A fixed blade doesn’t mean much if the sheath is junk. Here you get a brown leather belt sheath with white contrast stitching and a snap-retention strap. It’s built to ride on a hip, not in a box. The stitching is obvious, intentional, and visible — you can see the work, not glue and hope.

Slide the 11.5-inch dagger home and it sits deep enough to protect the point but high enough to draw without theatrics. This is how field daggers have been carried for decades: leather, belt loop, snap, done.

Balanced Weight and Handling

At 6.53 oz, the Old-World Commando Field Dagger carries light for its size. The full tang and brass guard give it enough forward presence to track true on a thrust, but the timber scales keep it from feeling handle-heavy or dead in the hand. It feels like what it is — a working commando-style dagger, not a wall ornament.

Why This Fixed Blade Dagger Belongs in a Serious Collection

If you collect by material, era style, or pattern, this piece earns its keep on three counts: full-tang steel, wood and brass classic build, and a complete leather-carried package. It sits comfortably alongside vintage military-inspired field knives and early commando blades that leaned on honest materials instead of marketing.

The straight dagger profile, brass guard, and leather sheath put it in that timeless zone between hunting knife and military sidearm. It’s the kind of blade that looks right next to surplus gear, field jackets, and older sheath knives that saw actual use instead of staged photos.

Classic Commando Styling, Modern Production

You’re not buying a museum piece here, and that’s the point. You’re getting classic commando dagger styling with modern, consistent production: symmetrical double edge, centered tip, and a polished blade that shows off the lines. The wood scales and brass guard keep the look grounded in old-world aesthetics without the fragility or cost of chasing originals.

Legal Context: Fixed Blade Knives, Adults, and Real Use

This is a fixed blade commando-style dagger: double-edged, 7 inches of steel, 11.5 inches overall. In a lot of states, that’s perfectly legal to own and collect. In some, double-edged knives or certain blade lengths trigger restrictions on carry, concealment, or in a few cases, outright bans.

Here’s the adult version: you know where you live. Knife laws are written state by state, sometimes city by city. Many U.S. states allow ownership of fixed blade knives like this dagger with varying rules on how and where you carry it. A smaller group restricts double-edged blades or treats them differently than single-edge knives. Before you clip this to a belt or ride with it in the truck, check your local statutes and, if needed, your city ordinances. Owning a commando-style dagger in most of the country is not a problem; walking into certain government buildings or specific cities with one absolutely can be.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

Brass knuckles are legal to buy in many states and tightly restricted or banned in others. Some states treat brass knuckles as prohibited weapons; others allow possession but regulate carry or intent; a growing number have loosened restrictions and treat them like any other defensive tool. In short: in legal states, you can buy brass knuckles without an issue from a reputable seller. In restricted states, you’re looking at potential criminal charges for possession or carry. Laws change, so check your state statutes — and in some places, local ordinances — before you order. The short version: in legal states, buying brass knuckles is straightforward; in ban states, it’s not worth trying to game the system.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious buyers look for solid metal: traditional brass, steel, or sometimes aluminum if weight is a factor. Solid brass knuckles carry that dense, heavy feel that soaks up shock and sits deep in the hand. Steel brass knuckles — often stainless or carbon steel — trade a bit of warmth for toughness and resistance to deformation. Cast zinc and cheap pot metal are what you walk past: they crack, bend, and feel wrong in the fist. If the seller isn’t up front about material, you already have your answer. Real brass, real steel, or a properly finished alloy — anything less is souvenir-tier, not collector-grade.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

Start where it matters: material and machining. Solid brass or steel, clean casting or milling, no sharp flashing or seams in the finger holes, and edges finished the way you want them — from smooth carry pieces to more aggressive profiles. Check thickness and weight; thin, light knuckles are for tourists. You also want honest legal clarity: a seller who can state plainly that they ship to legal states and don’t dance around the question. Design is last: classic four-finger, trench-inspired hybrids, or more modern minimalist frames. The right set of brass knuckles feels solid in the hand, sits flush across the palm, and doesn’t pretend to be something it isn’t.

Buy with Confidence: A Fixed Blade Dagger That Knows Its Role

The Old-World Commando Field Dagger - Steel/Wood is for buyers who already know the difference between a real fixed blade and a costume prop. Full-tang steel, double-edged dagger profile, brass guard, timber scales, and a leather sheath — that’s the entire story. If you’re building out a kit, rounding out a commando-inspired lineup, or just want a straight-shooting field dagger that looks like it belongs on a real belt, this one does the job without apology.

Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 11.5
Weight (oz.) 6.53
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Dagger
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Smooth
Handle Material Wood
Theme Old-World
Handle Length (inches) 4.5
Tang Type Full Tang
Carry Method Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather Sheath