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Dragon Regent Concealed Blade Sword Cane - Black & Brass

Price:

10.46


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Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane - Black & Brass

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The first time you grip the Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane, it feels like picking up a piece of quiet authority. The sculpted dragon head handle anchors your hand, while the smooth black shaft keeps the profile discreet. A 17-inch steel blade rides hidden inside, ready with a clean, confident draw. For collectors, it’s a standout dragon-themed display piece; for daily carriers, it’s a refined walking cane with a concealed edge that looks at home by the door or at your side.

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SWC901152

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Theme
  • Concealed Length (inches)
  • Concealment Type

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When a Cane Becomes a Quiet Statement Piece

There’s a specific moment with the Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane when it clicks. Your hand finds the dragon’s sculpted head, fingers resting along the scaled contours, and the weight feels composed, not costume. Then you break the seal, draw the concealed steel, and the cane stops being just an accessory—it becomes a piece you choose on purpose.

This sword cane isn’t trying to shout. The long black shaft keeps everything understated, while the brass collar and antique-finished dragon handle signal that this is more than a prop. It’s built to live by the door, on the stand, or in your hand when you step out.

Why This Sword Cane Earns a Place in the Collection

Collectors don’t keep pieces that only look good in photos. The Dragon Regent works because it balances display presence with functional design. At 38 inches overall, the cane has the proportions of a real walking companion, not a shortened novelty. Inside, a 17-inch steel blade runs the length of the shaft, giving you real reach when drawn.

The dragon head is the focal point: open jaws, pronounced brow, and textured scales that double as tactile grip. Paired with the brass-colored collar, the handle feels like something salvaged from a fantasy court, then mounted to a modern, low-profile cane shaft.

Build Quality Details That Matter

Under the fantasy styling, the Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane is about simple, reliable construction. The straight black shaft keeps the profile slim, giving the hidden blade a stable track and minimizing rattle. The brass-colored collar at the junction between handle and shaft isn’t just ornamental—it’s the mechanical transition point where the blade draws and returns.

Secure Blade Housing and Confident Draw

The concealed 17-inch steel blade sits inside the cane with a snug fit designed to reduce play as you walk and move. That tight housing means when you pull the handle, you feel a clean break and an uninterrupted draw instead of a loose, noisy release. The long, slim profile of the blade also lets it re-seat smoothly, so you’re not fighting misalignment every time you stow it.

Grip, Control, and Walking Comfort

The dragon head handle isn’t just sculpture. The ridges of the scales and the contours of the jawline give your fingers predictable indexing points. Whether you’re using it as a walking cane or practicing a fast, straight-line draw, that texture matters. At the base, the black rubber tip caps the cane, providing traction on floors and pavement while protecting the shaft from impact wear.

From Display Piece to Daily Companion

Some sword canes live their whole lives as shelf queens. This one is built to move. The smooth black shaft reads as a traditional cane at a glance, which makes the piece wearable in more settings. The dragon and brass details add character without drifting into oversized, impractical proportions.

By the door, it’s an easy conversation starter. In a collection, it bridges fantasy and gentleman’s cane aesthetics. In the hand, it’s a comfortable walking stick that happens to hide a blade when you decide the moment calls for more than appearance.

Regal Dragon Design for Fantasy and Historical Collectors

The Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane sits at the crossroads of fantasy lore and old-world status symbol. The dragon head evokes guardianship and power, the kind of creature you’d expect perched on a throne room bannister. The black-and-brass palette keeps it grounded, avoiding the overly bright finishes that push some themed canes into costume territory.

That balance—ornate handle, understated shaft—is what makes it play well with both fantasy displays and more traditional weapon collections. It looks at home next to long blades, historical canes, or curated dragon-themed shelves.

What Balisong Buyers Want to Know

Are butterfly knives legal to buy?

Even if you’re here for a sword cane, a lot of collectors also hunt for a butterfly knife for sale, so legality always comes up. In the United States, balisong and butterfly knife laws are mostly set at the state level. As of the latest widely referenced information:

  • Generally more permissive states (often allowing ownership and, in many cases, carry with fewer restrictions) include: Arizona, Texas, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Florida, Georgia, and much of the South and Midwest.
  • States with significant restrictions or bans on balisongs include: California (strict blade-length and carry rules), New York (complex definitions and local rules), Massachusetts, Hawaii, and New Jersey, among others.
  • Some states treat balisongs like switchblades or gravity knives, which can move them into prohibited or tightly controlled categories.

Laws change, and cities can add their own rules. Before you buy a butterfly knife or balisong for sale—or decide how to carry any edged tool—check your current state and local laws, including knife type, blade length, and carry method (open vs. concealed).

What’s the difference between a butterfly knife trainer and a live blade?

If you’re cross-shopping this sword cane with a balisong for skill practice, here’s the quick breakdown:

  • Butterfly knife trainer: Has dull edges and often a blunt tip, usually with cutouts in the blade to reduce weight. It’s designed for flipping, not cutting, so you can drill openings, aerials, and combos with far less risk of slicing your fingers.
  • Live blade balisong: Carries a sharpened edge and real point. It behaves like a working knife during cutting tasks and adds real consequences to sloppy flipping. The safe handle/bite handle orientation and blade channel clearance matter more here, because a missed catch can mean stitches.

Many in the balisong community start with a trainer to build muscle memory, then transition to a live blade once they can control momentum, handle alignment, and basic safety.

Is this sword cane good for learning blade handling?

The Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane isn’t a flipping trainer and won’t mimic a butterfly knife’s action, but it does have its own handling skill curve. The long shaft and concealed blade reward smooth, straight-line draws and cleaner body mechanics. Practicing your grip on the dragon handle, refining how you index the blade on the draw, and learning how the weight carries as a walking cane all build comfort with edged tools in a different format.

If your main goal is aerials, chaplins, and fan work, look for a dedicated balisong trainer for sale. If you want something that complements your collection and adds a different style of draw-and-present skill, this sword cane fills that role.

Collector, Carrier, Curator of Steel

Whether you’re the person who spends nights dialing in balisong tricks, the one arranging a wall of fantasy weapons and historical pieces, or the one who just wants a distinctive cane by the door, the Dragon Regent Regal Sword Cane speaks your language: design with intent, steel with purpose.

In the end, this cane isn’t about pretending to be something it’s not. It’s about owning exactly what it is—a regal dragon-headed sword cane that looks right at home in the hand, in the hall, or in the collection you’re building piece by piece.

Blade Length (inches) 17
Overall Length (inches) 38
Theme Dragon
Concealed Length (inches) 17
Concealment Type Cane