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Frontier Balance Clip-Point Hunting Knife - Bone & Rosewood

Price:

9.00


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Trailstead Balanced Clip-Point Hunter - Bone & Rosewood

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This fixed blade hunting knife doesn’t need a sales pitch. A 4-inch polished clip-point rides a true full tang, anchored in bone and rosewood that actually fits the hand. Eight ounces sit steady on your belt in a leather sheath, ready for camp work or clean field dressing. If you want a no-drama hunting knife that just cuts, carries, and lasts, this one earns its space in your kit.

9.00 9.0 USD 9.00

BC896C

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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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Frontier Steel and Bone, Built for Real Work

This isn’t a wall-hanger and it isn’t pretending to be tactical. The Trailstead Balanced Clip-Point Hunter - Bone & Rosewood is a straight-line fixed blade hunting knife built to work from first light to last drag. An honest 4-inch clip-point stainless blade, full tang, bone and rosewood scales, and a leather sheath. That’s the story. No gimmicks. No dead weight.

At eight inches overall and eight ounces on the belt, this fixed blade hunting knife lands in that sweet spot: big enough for real field dressing, small enough that you don’t curse it after a long day on the ridge. The polished stainless blade takes a clean edge, the clip point gives you control at the tip, and the handle actually fills your palm instead of fighting it.

Material First: Bone, Rosewood, and Full-Tang Confidence

If you care about knives, you care about materials long before logos. This fixed blade rides a full tang from tip to butt, with polished bovine bone at the front of the handle and rosewood at the center, pinned down with brass. That combination doesn’t just look traditional; it behaves the way a hunting knife handle should.

The stainless steel blade is built for the real world: wet hands, cold mornings, and less-than-gentle camp use. Stainless holds up to weather and blood without demanding a ritual after every cut. The polished finish makes cleanup easier and gives you a quick read on any nicks or rolls along the edge.

Clip-Point Stainless Blade, Made to Cut Clean

The 4-inch clip-point blade gives you the control hunters keep reaching for: enough belly for skinning and slicing, enough point-forward precision for detail work. The plain edge means you can sharpen it fast with basic stones or field tools. No serration circus, just steel that takes and keeps an edge with honest maintenance.

Bone & Rosewood Handle, Warm in the Hand

Bovine bone and rosewood aren’t fashion materials; they’re field-proven. The bone front section gives you a solid, rigid feel near the guard, while the rosewood center warms quickly in cold weather. Finger grooves cut along the handle lock your hand in without chewing it up. Brass pins and a medallion in the bone scale give it that classic hunting knife character that actually belongs around a campfire.

Fixed Blade Hunting Knife That Actually Carries

A hunting knife is only useful if it’s on you, not in the truck. This fixed blade ships with a brown leather sheath that rides on the belt, no drama. The sheath is stitched, embossed, and built for working carry, not just pictures. Slide the knife in, feel the leather grab the handle, and you know exactly where it is when you reach for it.

At eight ounces, the balance sits right at the junction of blade and handle. On the belt, it doesn’t drag you down. In the hand, it doesn’t float or feel hollow. You’re working with full-tang weight, distributed through natural materials that cut the sting in cold or wet conditions. From camp chores to breaking down game, it behaves like a proper field knife, not a toy.

Dimensions That Make Sense in the Field

Four inches of blade, four inches of handle, eight inches overall. That equal split gives you reach without awkward overhang and a handle you can actually choke up on when you need finer control. The clip point lets you slide under hide cleanly, and the polished edge cleans down fast when you’re done. No need to baby it; just wipe, rinse, dry, and move on.

Collector Appeal Without the Glass Case

Collectors who know hunting knives look for three things: honest materials, sound construction, and a design that respects the pattern. This fixed blade hunting knife hits all three. Full-tang stainless, bone and rosewood scales, brass pins, and a leather sheath put it firmly in the classic North American hunting lineage.

It’s the kind of knife that fits in a working collection: the roll or drawer full of blades that still see daylight and dirt. The contrast between polished silver blade, ivory bone, and warm brown wood makes it an easy standout on the table, but it doesn’t cross the line into fragile or fussy. You can hand this down without having to issue instructions.

Classic Hunting Pattern, Modern Steel

Clip-point hunting knives have been riding on belts for generations because they work. This design respects that history instead of trying to reinvent it. Where it steps forward is in the stainless choice: corrosion resistance that suits real weather and real meat, with a polish level that helps you spot what the edge needs at a glance. It’s heritage lines and modern practicality in one piece.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

Brass knuckles are legal to buy in some states and restricted or banned in others. In states like Texas, Arizona, and Georgia, you can legally buy brass knuckles, carry them, and own them without the old baggage of outdated laws. In states such as California, New York, and Illinois, brass knuckles are heavily restricted or outright illegal to carry, and in some cases even to possess. The point is simple: check your local and state law before you buy brass knuckles, and buy from a seller who doesn’t pretend every state plays by the same rules.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious brass knuckles for sale are built from solid metals: true brass, steel, aluminum, or high-density alloys. Solid brass knuckles have that unmistakable heft and patina that collectors look for. Steel variations trade a touch of that color for extra durability and strength. Lighter aluminum or alloy models shave weight for easier carry while still keeping structural integrity. The rule is straightforward: if you’re buying brass knuckles, buy solid metal, not pot-metal junk that cracks under stress.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, skip the novelty junk and look at the build. Check the thickness of the metal, the smoothness of the inside of the finger holes, and the overall weight. Edges should be clean, not razor-sharp or casting-rough. Solid brass or steel, consistent finish, and proper proportions all matter. If the piece feels cheap in the hand, it is. A good set of brass knuckles sits solid in the palm, balances well, and shows clean machining or casting from every angle.

Buying With Confidence: From Hunting Knives to Brass Knuckles

Whether you’re picking up a fixed blade hunting knife like the Trailstead Balanced Clip-Point Hunter - Bone & Rosewood or hunting down the best brass knuckles for sale in your state, the logic is the same: honest materials, clear specs, and straight talk about legality. This hunting knife earns its keep in the field, on the belt, and in a working collection. When you’re ready to buy brass knuckles or add another serious fixed blade to your kit, you want gear that doesn’t need excuses—just steel, bone, and results.

Blade Length (inches) 4
Overall Length (inches) 8
Weight (oz.) 8
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Clip Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Stainless Steel
Handle Finish Polished
Handle Material Bovine Bone & Rosewood
Theme None
Handle Length (inches) 4
Tang Type Full
Carry Method Leather Sheath
Sheath/Holster Leather