Skip to Content
Crimson Decoy Covert Lipstick Knife - Red Gloss

Price:

4.99


AerialFlow Air-Balanced Butterfly Knife - Silver Steel
AerialFlow Air-Balanced Butterfly Knife - Silver Steel
5.40 5.40
Shadow Agent Micro Fixed Hidden Knife - Matte Black
Shadow Agent Micro Fixed Hidden Knife - Matte Black
3.25 3.25

Vanity Viper Covert Lipstick Knife - Crimson Gloss

https://www.buybrassknuckles.com/web/image/product.template/3136/image_1920?unique=6749ef7

7 sold in last 24 hours

This isn’t a toy; it’s a covert lipstick knife that hides in plain sight. A glossy crimson tube opens to a precise 1-inch hawkbill blade inside a 2.75-inch body, giving you tight control for packages or close-quarters cuts. The injection-molded housing feels like real cosmetics and rides unnoticed in a purse or pocket. For collectors of hidden knives and covert EDC, it’s a clean, clever piece that sells its own story the second you twist it open.

4.99 4.99 USD 4.99

FF273RD

Not Available For Sale

2 people are viewing this right now

  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealment Type

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Hidden Knife, Zero Apologies

The Crimson Decoy Covert Lipstick Knife - Red Gloss is exactly what it looks like: a lipstick tube that isn’t here for makeup. It’s a compact hidden knife built into a glossy red body that disappears in plain sight. No gimmicks, no nonsense—just a 1-inch hawkbill blade tucked into a 2.75-inch lipstick-sized housing that feels like the real thing in hand and in a bag.

If you collect hidden knives or covert everyday carry, this is the kind of piece you buy because it does its job without begging for attention. It looks like a standard lipstick until the moment you twist and pull, and a tight, curved edge snaps into view—ready for packaging, cord, or emergency self-defense work at arm’s length.

Build Quality Behind the Disguise

The lipstick knife only works if two things are true: it passes a quick glance as real cosmetics, and the blade doesn’t feel like a throwaway novelty. This one hits both marks. The injection-molded housing has that smooth, glossy resistance you expect from real lipstick tubes—no cheap toy feel, no flimsy rattle. The red gloss finish reads like an everyday cosmetic from across a room or at the bottom of a purse.

Inside, the blade is a compact hawkbill profile in a clean silver finish. The curve isn’t for show; it gives you controlled, pulling cuts with minimal force. On something this small, straight blades tend to slip. A hawkbill bites and tracks. That’s exactly what you want when you’re cutting tape, plastic, or anything that needs a precise pull instead of a wild stab.

Hawkbill Edge for Controlled Work

The 1-inch hawkbill blade is short, but that’s the point. Once deployed, it behaves like a mini fixed blade. No folders, no extra joints to slop out over time—just a solid little claw. For an everyday carry tool that lives in a purse or pocket organizer, that’s ideal. It opens, cuts, and goes back under cover without a production.

The satin-style silver finish keeps reflections down and gives the edge a clean, utilitarian look. This isn’t a fantasy blade. It’s a working profile scaled down for covert carry.

Compact 2.75-Inch Body, Real-World Carry

At 2.75 inches overall, the lipstick knife lives where real lipstick lives—small bags, clutches, center console trays, desk drawers. The proportions are deliberate: short enough not to print oddly in a purse, long enough to get an honest grip when you twist the cap and access the blade. You don’t need a full fist here; you need two fingers and control.

Covert EDC for Buyers Who Don’t Broadcast

Some people want a knife that screams for attention. This isn’t built for them. This lipstick knife is for the buyer who understands that the best tool is often the one nobody notices. In a row of cosmetics, it disappears. In a handful of personal items dumped on a counter, it passes as another tube of red.

That makes it interesting on two fronts: as a hidden knife for low-profile self-defense and as a collectible for anyone building a lineup of disguised blades—pen knives, belt buckle knives, card knives, and now a lipstick knife that actually looks the part.

Legal Context: Hidden Knives and Adult Decisions

Like any concealed or disguised blade, this covert lipstick knife sits under state and local weapon laws, not feelings. There’s no lecture here, just facts: in some states and cities, disguised knives are treated the same as other small fixed blades; in others, they’re restricted or outright banned to carry, and occasionally to own. The buyer needs to know where their state lines are before they drop this into a purse and call it a day.

Ownership and carry rules are not identical. A state may allow you to own a hidden knife in your collection at home while restricting concealed carry in public or on certain properties. That’s normal. It’s on you to match this piece to how and where you intend to use it—display, collection, practice, or actual carry.

This is a legal product sold to adults who can read their own state statutes. You’re not buying a toy; you’re buying a disguised blade. Treat the law with the same seriousness you treat the edge.

Material and Design Details Collectors Actually Care About

Collectors don’t ask, “Is it cool?” They ask, “How is it built?” This lipstick knife earns its spot because the form and function are aligned. The injection-molded housing holds up to repeated opening and closing without wobbling out. The black inner core contrasts cleanly against the red gloss tube, giving you a clear visual separation when you open it—cosmetic look, tool function.

The blade’s hawkbill geometry is scaled for real use, not just appearance. A 1-inch curve may sound small on paper, but anyone who’s cut open shipping tape, blister packs, or reinforced plastic knows that controlled pull cuts beat brute force nine times out of ten. That’s what this profile is made for.

Disguised Form, Honest Function

There’s no fake swivel, no useless decorative hardware, no attempt to be cute. It’s a lipstick body, a twist, and a blade. The simplicity is the point. When you demonstrate it to someone in the shop or at home, you don’t have to explain a thing—show the red tube, twist, reveal the steel, and let the design make the case.

Where It Fits in a Hidden Knife Collection

For collectors already running pen knives, key knives, and faux-flashlight blades, the lipstick knife fills a specific niche: cosmetic-based concealment. It’s an everyday object that usually lives close to the body, especially in women’s carry systems—purses, makeup bags, vanity drawers. That context makes it more interesting than yet another "secret pen" variant.

Line this up with other covert pieces and it stands out visually while still passing the distance test as real lipstick. That split—believable at a glance, obvious up close—is where good disguised tools live.

Questions About Brass Knuckles For Sale

Are brass knuckles legal to buy?

Brass knuckles are legal to buy in some states and tightly restricted or banned in others. States like Texas and Arizona have moved to legalize brass knuckles for adults, while places such as California, New York, and Illinois maintain strict prohibitions on possession or carry. Some states allow ownership at home but restrict concealed carry. Laws also change, and local ordinances can be stricter than state law. Before you buy brass knuckles online or in-store, check your current state and city statutes, not just headlines or hearsay.

What material are quality brass knuckles made from?

Serious brass knuckles are typically made from solid brass, steel, aluminum, or modern alloys. Solid brass knuckles carry that unmistakable dense weight and patina over time, which is why collectors hunt them. Steel knuckles bring higher strength and a harder feel, sometimes at the cost of extra weight. Aluminum knuckles cut weight for faster handling and easier pocket or bag carry. Cheaper cast pot metal or plastic pieces feel wrong immediately—light, hollow, and prone to failure. A good set of brass knuckles will feel solid, balanced, and unapologetically dense in the hand.

What should I look for when buying brass knuckles?

When you buy brass knuckles, start with material and finish. Solid brass or steel construction, clean casting, and properly sized finger holes matter more than any marketing line. Edges should be finished—either left intentionally crisp for impact or smoothed just enough to avoid hot spots on the hand. Weight should match your intent: heavier for collection and display, balanced for actual carry or training. Confirm that brass knuckles are legal to own and carry in your state before you click buy. If the seller talks straight about materials and legality, you’re in the right place.

Buy with Confidence

If you’re building out a hidden knife setup, this Crimson Decoy Covert Lipstick Knife - Red Gloss earns its slot. It hides in plain sight, cuts like a purpose-built mini fixed blade, and carries easily without broadcasting itself. Pair it with your preferred brass knuckles for sale, keep your legal bases covered, and you’ve got a quiet, effective addition to your self-defense or collector lineup that looks like any other tube of red until the moment it matters.

Blade Length (inches) 1
Overall Length (inches) 2.75
Blade Color Silver
Handle Finish Glossy
Concealment Type Lipstick