Jaxenro
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 254
The little pearl scaled dress knives that Lefty mentioned would be called a Fruit Knife on this side of the pond. Alas the carrying of knives here would result in 10 years hard labour at Her Majesty's Pleasure.
Wow. Here it varies by state but you are usually good under 3" bade. I forget what it is in my state I have a weapons permit so essentially up to a sword blade is legalThe little pearl scaled dress knives that Lefty mentioned would be called a Fruit Knife on this side of the pond. Alas the carrying of knives here would result in 10 years hard labour at Her Majesty's Pleasure.
I have a modest collection of laguioles....love them.I own a number of Laguiole and Buck folders one of which I always have with me. I prefer the Laguioles over the Bucks though, dressier and available in the most stunning handle variations and there are models with a corkscrew.
This is going to sound weird, but -- Is there such a thing as a legal (depending on your jurisdiction, of course) folding pocket knife that can flick open? Not a switchblade, of course. But I see listings for "assisted opening" or "spring-loaded" folding knives, and I'm not sure what that means. It would be nice, if I have to cut open a box at work, to be able to fish my knife out of my briefcase and flick it open one-handed.
That's nice. I do have a box cutter in my desk drawer, though, so I was looking for something I could slip into my messenger bag-style briefcase and carry for other uses. Do any of them come with wood or bone inlays like jackknives?
I have one of these as a box cutter. They slide back in when not in use and after a little wear (or stretching the metal casing) you can get it so it slides open really easily, or with a simple tap on the back of the cutter, on the surface you're working on.
This is going to sound weird, but -- Is there such a thing as a legal (depending on your jurisdiction, of course) folding pocket knife that can flick open? Not a switchblade, of course. But I see listings for "assisted opening" or "spring-loaded" folding knives, and I'm not sure what that means. It would be nice, if I have to cut open a box at work, to be able to fish my knife out of my briefcase and flick it open one-handed.