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Green-Eyed Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

Price:

2.33


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Green Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull

https://www.selfdefensestunguns.com/web/image/product.template/754/image_1920?unique=30af114

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A hidden knife that actually earns pocket space, the Green Reaper Karambit Comb Knife disguises a 3-inch black hawkbill blade inside a full-size comb cover. The skull graphic with green eyes grabs attention, while the karambit-style finger ring locks your grip for controlled cutting. At just 1.16 ounces and 4.5 inches closed, it rides light, reveals with drama, and handles real EDC tasks—ideal for collectors, retailers, and anyone who wants a comb knife that’s more than a novelty.

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Handle Finish
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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Some gear is loud on the shelf and useless in the hand. The Green Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull earns attention first, then earns its keep. At a glance, it’s a glossy skull-covered comb with eerie green eyes staring out from a black backdrop. Slide the cover and a curved hawkbill blade appears, anchored by a karambit-style finger ring that turns a disguised grooming tool into a compact, controlled cutting tool.

Design Story: A reaper-themed comb knife that hides a karambit curve

The Green Reaper comb knife is built around a simple idea: if you’re going to carry a hidden knife, it should be both believable in disguise and capable in use. The comb format gives it an everyday, toss-it-on-the-counter look. The full skull graphic with green eyes adds attitude without sacrificing the illusion. Inside, a 3-inch black hawkbill blade sits ready behind the comb cover, giving you a genuine cutting profile instead of a toy edge.

At 7.5 inches overall and 4.5 inches closed, this hidden knife lands in the same footprint as a full-size comb or slim pocket tool. The 1.16-ounce weight keeps it light enough for pocket, bag, or display rail. It feels like something you’d actually carry, not just something you’d photograph.

How this comb knife actually works in hand

When you strip away the skulls and novelty factor, this is a small, practical cutting tool disguised as a comb. The detachable comb cover acts like a sheath: it conceals the blade, protects the edge, and keeps teeth ready for grooming if you want the disguise to be convincing. When it’s time to use the knife, your index finger finds the karambit-style ring, the cover slides clear, and the hawkbill blade comes into play.

Hawkbill profile for controlled pull cuts

The hawkbill curve is designed to bite into material and stay engaged as you pull: great for opening packages, cutting tape, trimming light cord, or handling other small utility tasks. Unlike a straight blade that can skate off slick surfaces, the hook-like profile of this hidden knife tends to draw in and hold to the cut line.

Karambit-inspired ring for secure handling

The ring at the end of the handle is more than a visual cue. It’s a reliable index point and retention feature. Slide a finger through, and the comb knife settles into a consistent grip every time. That matters when you’re working in tight spaces or around delicate packaging—your grip stays anchored, the blade angle stays predictable, and the risk of slipping drops.

Build details that matter for a hidden comb knife

Disguised knives live or die on two things: how convincing the disguise is, and how usable the tool becomes once revealed. The Green Reaper balances both without leaning on gimmicks.

Convincing comb form with full-coverage art

The comb cover runs the full length of the handle, so closed, the silhouette reads as a comb first, hidden knife second. The glossy black finish and repeated skull pattern with green eyes tie the handle and cover together visually, helping the two parts read as a single complete object until you separate them.

Lightweight construction for real carry

At just 1.16 ounces, this comb knife disappears in a pocket or bag. The slim profile keeps it from printing or tangling with other items. If you’re a retailer, that same light build makes it ideal for peg hooks, counter racks, and cases where customers want to handle something without feeling weighed down.

Why the Green Reaper stands out for collectors and retailers

Hidden knives are a crowded category: plenty of concepts, not all of them practical. This comb knife earns its place by combining a recognizable theme, a believable disguise, and real cutting function.

For collectors, the full skull motif and green eyes create a cohesive reaper aesthetic that fits gothic and tactical collections. The black hawkbill blade and ring give it the silhouette of a compact karambit while still being something you can toss in a toiletries bag or desk drawer.

For retailers, this is story-driven inventory that doesn’t require a sales script. The demo writes itself: show the comb, mention the skulls, reveal the blade. Customers get a clear visual moment—“I didn’t expect that”—which is exactly the kind of reveal that moves impulse buys and rewards repeat visits.

Carry reality: where this hidden comb knife fits in everyday life

This isn’t a replacement for a primary work knife or a heavy-duty tool. It’s a light-duty hidden knife with a themed design and enough edge to justify keeping it nearby. It makes sense in:

  • Everyday carry rotations for people who like a backup or conversation piece.
  • Travel kits (where legal) as a compact utility cutter that doesn’t shout “knife” at first glance.
  • Desk drawers, glove boxes, or tool rolls as a backup edge that doubles as a comb.

As always, you’re responsible for knowing how local laws treat disguised or hidden knives—what’s fine in a display case might not be allowed in every pocket or public setting.

Comb knife vs. standard small folding knife

Compared to a typical compact folding knife, the Green Reaper trades a bit of blunt honesty for surprise and style. The standard folder gives you obvious utility. This comb knife gives you utility plus theater. The hawkbill blade and ring add control and visual interest; the comb cover provides protection and disguise. If your goal is maximum cutting performance, a dedicated folder might win. If you want a functional blade that also starts conversations and fits a themed collection, this hidden comb knife delivers.

What People Ask Before Buying a Stun Gun for Protection

How effective are stun guns for self defense?

A stun gun for self defense works by delivering high-voltage, low-amperage electrical pulses through contact points on the device. When pressed firmly against an attacker’s body for several seconds, a quality stun gun can disrupt muscle control, cause pain, and create an opportunity to break contact and escape. Their effectiveness depends on three real factors: amperage (current), contact time, and where you place it on the body—more than the “million volt” claims you see on packaging. They’re close-contact tools, not distance stoppers, so they’re best used with awareness, a solid grip, and a plan to move away the moment you create an opening.

Does voltage or amperage matter more in a stun gun?

Voltage gets the headlines; amperage does the work. Voltage is mostly about how well the current can arc through clothing or air gaps. Once contact is made, it’s the amperage—the amount of current flowing—that drives muscle disruption and pain. Most consumer stun gun for self defense models advertise huge voltage numbers because they sound impressive, but beyond a certain point, more advertised voltage doesn’t equal more real stopping power. If you’re comparing options, look at overall build quality, contact area, battery performance, and how securely you can hold and activate the device. Those factors will influence real-world effectiveness far more than another “million volts” on a box.

Is this stun gun legal to carry in my state?

Stun gun laws vary by state and even by city. Some states treat a stun gun for self defense as a standard defensive tool for adults; others require permits, restrict carry in certain locations (schools, government buildings), or ban certain designs outright. A practical approach is to check three levels: state statutes, any big-city ordinances where you live or travel, and specific rules for places you frequent (workplace, campus, transit). Many states publish plain-language summaries on official sites, and reputable retailers often link to legal overviews—but those are starting points, not legal advice. Before you carry daily, verify current laws where you live.

The Green Reaper Karambit Comb Knife - Black Skull doesn’t pretend to be more than it is: a light, cleverly disguised knife with a strong visual theme and honest utility. If you want a hidden knife that feels like a compact karambit, looks like a comb at first glance, and actually cuts when you need it, this design fits neatly into a pocket, a display, or a collection—and does its job without drama.

Blade Length (inches) 3
Overall Length (inches) 7.5
Closed Length (inches) 4.5
Weight (oz.) 1.16
Blade Color Black
Handle Finish Glossy
Concealed Length (inches) 4.5
Concealment Type Comb