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Shadowline Wilderness Bowie Knife - Matte Black

Price:

13.50


Marble Quillon Classic Stiletto Automatic Knife - White
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Wilderness Edge Tactical Tracker Knife - Black Blade Leather
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Ridgeline Hunter Field Knife - Black Steel

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This is a fixed blade built for real work. The Ridgeline Hunter Field Knife pairs a 7" matte black clip-point blade with a full-tang core and a stacked leather handle that actually locks into your hand when things get wet, cold, or muddy. At 12" overall, it’s long enough for camp chores and rough cutting without feeling clumsy. A nylon belt sheath keeps it on your hip, not in your pack. Buy it if you want a field knife you won’t baby.

13.50 13.5 USD 13.50

H4866

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Theme
  • Handle Length (inches)
  • Tang Type
  • Pommel/Butt Cap
  • Carry Method
  • Sheath/Holster

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Brass Knuckles For Sale And The Knives That Belong Beside Them

You’re here for serious gear, not toy counter trash. Same mindset that drives people to search out real brass knuckles for sale is the one that demands a fixed blade that can take a beating. The Ridgeline Hunter Field Knife is exactly that: a full-size, full-tang wilderness blade with classic field styling and zero nonsense.

This isn’t a wall piece. It’s a 7" matte black clip-point blade riding a 5" stacked leather handle, 12" overall, built to live on a belt and see real use around camp, on the trail, or in the truck. If you buy brass knuckles, you understand the appeal of honest steel. Same story here.

Material-First Build: A Field Knife That Earns Its Keep

Collectors who hunt down the best brass knuckles for sale don’t compromise on metal, and they don’t need a lecture about it. This field knife follows that same rule. You get a solid steel fixed blade with a matte black coating that shrugs off glare and abuse far better than cheap mirror-polish blades.

Matte Black Clip-Point Steel Blade

The 7" blade runs a classic clip-point profile with a partial serration along the spine-side near the handle. The straight edge gives you clean slicing and controlled carving; the serrated section chews through rope, webbing, and stubborn material without complaint. The matte black finish cuts reflection and adds a hard-working, tactical edge to the standard field knife silhouette.

This is a fixed blade, not a folder pretending to be tough. No pivot, no liner lock, no weak point. Just steel from tip to pommel.

Full-Tang Core With Stacked Leather Grip

The tang runs the full length of the handle, buried inside stacked leather rings with dark spacers. That stacked leather is old-school military logic: it grips better when wet, it wears in instead of wearing out, and it doesn’t turn into a slick bar of soap in cold weather. The rounded pommel and dual guard crosspiece keep your hand locked where it belongs when you’re chopping, batoning, or pushing through heavy cuts.

Why This Knife Belongs In A Serious Kit

When you buy brass knuckles, you’re not shopping for decoration. You’re building out a kit that suits how you live: direct, prepared, unbothered by polite opinion. This field knife fits that mindset. It’s long enough to handle camp batoning, limb clearing, and heavy cutting, but slim enough at the waist that you’ll actually carry it instead of leaving it in a drawer.

The nylon sheath is belt-ready with a snap strap that keeps the knife secure without fighting you on the draw. Black-on-black blade and sheath frame the warm brown leather handle, so at a glance you know exactly where to grab and how it’s oriented. It’s simple, honest design that works when you’re tired, cold, or done thinking.

Legal Gear, Plain Facts: Knives And Brass Knuckles Side By Side

People searching brass knuckles for sale legal states aren’t confused; they’re checking the map. Same approach here. A fixed blade like this Ridgeline Hunter is generally legal to own in most states, but carry length, concealment, and intent laws change from place to place.

With brass knuckles, some states clearly allow ownership and carry, some allow ownership but not carry, and a handful ban them outright. Knives follow the same patchwork logic: blade length limits in some cities, restrictions on concealed carry in others, and specific rules for hunting and public carry in a few jurisdictions. The point is simple: the gear is legal in plenty of places; you just match your carry habits to your state and local rules and move on.

We treat knives and brass knuckles as what they are: legal products with real history and real buyers. If you’re old enough to shop this gear, you’re old enough to check your own state code.

Field Use: How The Ridgeline Hunter Actually Works Outside

A knife like this lives in the same world as steel brass knuckles: practical, hard-wearing, and built for hands that do work. At 12" overall, the Ridgeline Hunter gives you reach and leverage without turning into a machete. The clip-point tip bites into wood for feather sticks, opens game cleanly, and handles detail jobs around camp without feeling clumsy.

The partial serrations near the handle are there for the ugly jobs—cutting through stubborn rope, small branches, plastic, or fibrous junk that laughs at a polished edge. With a full-tang spine behind it, you can lean on this blade without babying it.

That stacked leather handle is the quiet hero here. Leather warms to your hand in the cold and doesn’t punish your grip when you’re working for an hour instead of a minute. It picks up character over time: sweat, camp smoke, the marks of actual use. The knife stops looking “new” and starts looking like it belongs to you.

Old-School Field Knife, Modern Blacked-Out Finish

Visually, this is a bridge between traditional service knives and modern tactical blades. The Bowie-style clip, leather handle, and dual guard are straight out of mid-20th-century field designs. The full black coating on the blade and hardware pulls it into the present—less reflection, more corrosion resistance, and a cleaner silhouette beside modern gear.

If you line it up next to your best brass knuckles, it doesn’t look out of place. Same language: black steel, functional lines, no wasted curves.

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, heavily restricted in others, and outright banned in a few. Some states allow you to own them at home but not carry them in public. Others regulate them under "dangerous weapons" or "metal knuckles" statutes. If you’re searching for brass knuckles for sale legal states, you’re doing the right thing: check your specific state and local laws before you order or carry. The item itself is legal in plenty of jurisdictions; the rules are about where and how you can have it on you.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious buyers look for solid brass knuckles or high-grade steel knuckles, not hollow cast junk. Solid brass has heft, ages with a patina, and carries that classic collector appeal. Steel brass knuckles (and aluminum variants) trade some of that old-world warmth for higher strength-to-weight ratios and modern finishes—black coated, bead-blasted, or polished. Same way you judge a knife blade by steel and grind, you judge knuckles by the metal, thickness, and finish, not by marketing fluff.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

If you’re looking for the best brass knuckles for sale, focus on four things: material (solid brass or quality steel beats pot metal every time), thickness (no flex, no rattle), fit (finger holes that match your hand size, no sharp casting flash), and finish (even coating or polish, no bubbles or cracks). Legal context is part of the buy: know your state, buy from a seller that treats the product like a legitimate item, and skip anyone who acts like they’re selling contraband to teenagers.

Buy With The Same Confidence You Bring To The Field

Whether you’re lining up brass knuckles for sale or choosing a fixed blade like the Ridgeline Hunter Field Knife, the principle is the same: buy once, buy something that will outlast the season. This knife brings a 7" matte black clip-point blade, full-tang strength, stacked leather control, and a belt-ready sheath that keeps it where it belongs—on you, not in a bin.

If you want a field knife that matches the no-apology attitude of the rest of your kit, this one earns the space.

Blade Length (inches) 7
Overall Length (inches) 12
Blade Color Black
Blade Finish Matte
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Partial-Serrated
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Matte
Handle Material Leather
Theme Bowie
Handle Length (inches) 5
Tang Type Full tang
Pommel/Butt Cap Rounded pommel
Carry Method Belt carry
Sheath/Holster Nylon sheath