Prism Arc Flipper EDC Knife - Rainbow Blue Acrylic
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This assisted opening knife doesn’t whisper, it flashes. The Prism Arc Flipper EDC Knife brings a 4" rainbow-finished spear point blade, steel construction, and a blue acrylic inlay handle together in one unapologetically loud piece. The flipper tab and liner lock give you fast, confident deployment; 7.27 oz. of steel gives it real presence in hand. Legal where assisted openers are allowed, it rides on your pocket clip as a functional everyday tool and a fantasy-grade showpiece in one.
Brass Knuckles For Sale? No. This Is Your Prism Arc Flipper EDC Knife
You came here to buy, not to be handheld. This isn’t brass knuckles for sale, it’s something else entirely: a loud, iridescent assisted opening knife built for buyers who like their everyday carry with some attitude. The Prism Arc Flipper EDC Knife throws a 4" rainbow-finished spear point blade, steel construction, and a deep blue acrylic inlay handle straight in your face and doesn’t apologize for any of it.
It’s a pocket knife, yes. It’s also a pocket showpiece. 9.5" overall, 5.375" closed, 7.27 oz. in the hand. Enough metal to feel like a tool, not a toy.
Why This Knife Belongs Next to Your Brass Knuckles For Sale
If you collect brass knuckles, assisted opening knives are the natural neighbor in the case. Same mindset: you care about steel, weight, finish, and whether the mechanism actually works when you need it. You don’t hang cheap mystery metal next to your solid brass knuckles; you don’t carry flimsy folders, either.
The Prism Arc is built as an EDC flipper with real hardware and a real lock, not a gas-station rattle trap. The iridescent finish and scrollwork may grab your eye first, but what keeps it in your pocket is simple: the knife opens clean, locks solid, and feels like something you can use, not just stare at.
Material-First Build: When the Finish Matches the Steel
Collectors don’t ask, “Is it cool?” They ask, “What’s it made of?” This blade is steel, full stop, with a rainbow iridescent finish and printed pattern that doesn’t hide the metal underneath. The handle is steel as well, dressed in blue acrylic inlays that give it that glassy, fantasy look without killing grip.
Steel Blade, Real Edge
The 4" spear point blade carries a plain edge. No serration gimmicks, no odd recurve to complicate sharpening. Just a clean profile with enough belly for slicing and a defined tip for detail work. The steel takes a working edge and pairs it with that iridescent treatment so you get both utility and display value.
Acrylic Inlay Handle With Actual Grip
The handle wears its acrylic inlay like armor plating rather than decoration glued on as an afterthought. The blue acrylic panels sit inside the iridescent frame, so you get a smooth, almost glassy touch on the inlay with the metal frame doing the real work of retention and lock support. The result: a handle that looks like fantasy art and still gives you a controlled, secure hold over 9.5" of overall length.
Assisted Opening That Earns Its Place
Some assisted knives feel like they’re barely waking up. This one actually snaps to attention. The deployment method is a flipper tab: one decisive push and the assisted mechanism does the rest, swinging that spear point into lockup. You get speed without crossing over into automatic territory.
A liner lock sits inside the handle, exactly where it should. You flick, it opens, the liner slides under the tang and holds. No drama, no wobble. And when you’re done, thumb the liner over, close it down, and you’re back to a pocketable 5.375" closed length riding on its belt clip.
Weight, Balance, and Pocket Reality
At 7.27 oz., the Prism Arc Flipper feels substantial. This isn’t a skeletonized feather; it’s a steel-bodied assisted folder that lets you know it’s there. That weight runs through the spine, giving it a steady, planted feel when you’re cutting. In pocket, the clip keeps it anchored, and the lanyard hole at the butt gives you options if you like a fob or retention cord on your EDC.
Legal Context: Assisted Opening Knife, Not Brass Knuckles
Let’s be blunt. You’re used to searching brass knuckles for sale and having to wade through hand-wringing disclaimers. Not here. This is an assisted opening folding knife. Legal treatment is different from brass knuckles, and it varies by state and sometimes city. In many states, assisted opening knives are treated as standard folding knives; in others, local codes draw lines around blade length, carry method, or "spring-assisted" language.
Your job is to know your local law. Our job is to deliver the product exactly as described: assisted flipper tab deployment, liner lock, folding design, pocket clip carry. No switchblade button, no automatic out-the-front trickery pretending to be something it’s not. If your state allows assisted openers and EDC folders, this piece fits cleanly in that lane.
Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale
Are brass knuckles legal to buy?
In the U.S., brass knuckles law is written state by state. Some states treat brass knuckles as outright prohibited weapons; others allow ownership but restrict carry; some allow purchase, possession, and carry with few limitations. There are also states where only certain materials or concealed carry are the issue. If you’re used to searching for brass knuckles for sale, you already know the drill: check your state statutes and, if needed, local ordinances before you buy or carry. Laws change, and the only opinion that matters is the one written into your code.
What material are quality brass knuckles made from?
Serious brass knuckles collectors look for real metal: solid brass, steel, occasionally aluminum for lighter weight, and sometimes exotic metals for limited runs. Cheap pot-metal or brittle cast junk doesn’t hold value, doesn’t feel right, and doesn’t belong in a serious collection. The same mindset applies here: you’re looking at a steel knife with an iridescent finish and acrylic inlay, because metal is what carries weight, edge, and long-term durability.
What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?
Material first, then machining, then provenance. Solid brass or steel construction, clean edges, consistent finish, and finger holes sized for actual hands. Then you look at who made it, where, and whether the piece fits your collecting lane: classic trench styles, minimalist punchers, ornate display pieces. When you’re buying an assisted opener to ride alongside your brass knuckles, the checklist is similar: real steel, reliable mechanism, solid lock, and a finish that doesn’t pretend to be something it isn’t.
Ready to Buy? Treat This Like Any Other Serious Piece
If you’re hunting brass knuckles for sale, you already think in terms of weight, metal, and feel. Apply the same standard here. The Prism Arc Flipper EDC Knife gives you a 4" steel blade, solid liner lock, assisted opening, and that unapologetic rainbow and blue acrylic combination that actually looks as wild in person as it does in photos. It’s a working assisted opening knife first and a fantasy display piece second. If that’s how you build a collection, this one earns a pocket clip or a spot in the case without needing a sales pitch.
| Blade Length (inches) | 4 |
| Overall Length (inches) | 9.5 |
| Closed Length (inches) | 5.375 |
| Weight (oz.) | 7.27 |
| Blade Color | Rainbow |
| Blade Finish | Iridescent |
| Blade Style | Spear Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Material | Steel |
| Handle Finish | Iridescent |
| Handle Material | Acrylic |
| Theme | Iridescent |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Flipper tab |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |