Why to Add a Rainbow Butterfly Knife to Your Collection

It’s hard to see butterfly knives at flea markets, at shops, and in the media, and not want to add one to your collection. 

As it turns out, they’re a lot more practical than you might expect. Here are a couple good reasons you should get yourself a rainbow butterfly knife. These tools are far from a gimmick and have a lot of selling points and practical applications.

It’ll Be Fun to Fidget with

The bottom line here is that butterfly knives are a lot more fun to fidget with than basically any other knife pattern. Fidget friendliness is basically baked into the design. 

Why carry some other fidget trinket when you already need an EDC knife? Kill two birds with one stone and just get a butterfly knife. Plus, on top of that, a rainbow butterfly knife will provide visual stimulation as well. 

There Are Lots of Tricks

There are many, many tricks you can learn to perform with a butterfly knife, including but not limited to basic opens, pen twirls, wrist passes, and “inverts.”

There are also whole classes of butterfly knife tricks called aerials, in which the knife leaves the users hands, and transfers, in which the knife switches from one hand to the other. 

Suffice it to say, many are harder than others and some are not beginner friendly, so if you do decide to carry a butterfly knife, you’ll have months and months, if not years, of learning ahead of you. 

The “Lock” Is Stronger Than That of Most Other Folders 

A butterfly knife does not have a lock in the conventional sense of the word. Instead of a lock, the butterfly knife is joined to its handles at both sides of the base of the blade. There are two pivot points instead of one. 

When the knife is secured in an open position, this configuration is arguably stronger than that of other folding knife locks like liner locks and lock backs, even though it isn’t technically a lock in the same sense.

Regardless, lock strength is one of the primary considerations you should look into when evaluating the viability of a folding knife, and butterfly knives are some of the most practical out there. 

Butterfly Knives Are More Practical Than You Think

Butterfly knives are available in a variety of different patterns and knife profiles, including basic drop points and clip points in addition to needle points, stilettos, spear points, tanto blades and even karambits. 

Whatever you’re looking for, there’s a good chance you can get it in a butterfly knife configuration.

It’s Cool 

Lastly, a rainbow butterfly knife is dripping with cool factor. This alone is a good reason to add one to your collection.

Where to Get a Rainbow Butterfly Knife 

In the market for a rainbow butterfly knife for your collection? Check True Swords first. Despite the name, they sell knives and other tools in addition to swords and weapons. Check out their website and get in touch with them if you have any questions before buying.

For more information about Awesome Sword and Wooden Handle Katana Please visit: True Swords.

Business

Not All THC Edibles Are the Same

THC edibles have come a long way from mystery brownies and hopeful guesswork. Today, cannabis edibles are formulated with actual precision. Specific cannabinoid ratios, clear mg-per-gummy breakdowns, and product lines designed around what the body actually needs. Whether someone’s brand new to marijuana edibles or has been experimenting for years, the newer ratio-based formats are […]

Read More
Business

Which Laboratory Air Dryer Is the Right Fit for a Small Research Lab?

Small research labs put a lot of care into the instruments they buy and the procedures they run, but the compressed air feeding those instruments often gets overlooked. Moisture in a compressed air line causes corrosion, contamination, and inaccurate readings, especially in precision environments where repeatability matters. Choosing the right laboratory air dryer means knowing […]

Read More
Business

Why Texas Natural Gas Operations Choose Lithium Chloride Desiccant Over Glycol

Texas produces more natural gas than any other state in the country, and every cubic foot of that gas carries moisture. Wet gas corrodes pipelines, freezes control valves, and creates hydrates that can block flow lines at the worst possible times. Keeping gas dry isn’t a best practice, it’s a physical requirement for safe and […]

Read More