Spyderco has
Select Spyderco Folding Knives on sale as listed below.
Shipping is free on $150+ orders.
Thanks to Community Member
kodachi for finding this deal.
Available Options:About these Knives:- Sage 1 Gray C123GGY Maxamet Folding Knife:
- The popular Sage Series has traditionally expressed the same iconic design with different lock mechanisms, paying homage to the innovative designers who created them. This rendition of the Sage 1 ushers in a new era by supercharging its Michael Walker LinerLock design with a blade crafted from Micro-Melt® Maxamet.
- Maxamet is an extremely hard powdered tool steel with properties that transcend conventional high-speed steels and approach those of cemented carbides. This knife's full-flat-ground, leaf-shaped blade is paired with a handle featuring full stainless steel liners, a reversible deep-pocket wire clip, and distinctive cool gray peel-ply-textured G-10 scales.
- Pattadese C257G Folding Knife:
- The Pattada was a modern interpretation of the traditional resolza, the signature folding knife of the city of Pattada, Sardinia. The all-new Pattadese (pronounced pah-tah-day-say) takes that stunning design and scales it down by over 15 percent to make it even handier and more pocket friendly.
- A proud member of Spyderco's Ethnic Series™, the Pattadese's iconic blade shape is faithfully expressed in M390 stainless steel. The full-flat-ground PlainEdge blade is housed in a gracefully curved handle built with full stainless steel liners and beautifully contoured G-10 scales. A sturdy LinerLock mechanism ensures that the blade locks securely open when in use and a deep-pocket wire clip keeps the Pattadese poised for instant access by providing a choice of left or right-side tip-up carry.
- Pochi C256TI Folding Knife:
- Japanese knifemaker Kazuyuki Sakurai specializes in intricate, handcrafted folding knives, many of which are inspired by the shapes of animals. Some of his most popular designs are the dog-shaped knives in his "Pochi" (poh-chee) series, which draws its name from the most common Japanese dog name, roughly the equivalent of "Spot."
- His first Spyderco collaboration faithfully translates this novel design into a unique production folder with a hollow-ground CPM S45VN™ blade, a bead-blasted titanium handle, a Reeve Integral Lock (R.I.L.), and a blue-anodized folding "tail," titanium pocket clip, and pivot-pin accent.
- Swayback C249TI Folding Knife:
- Inspired by 19th century English Jack knives, the sway back pattern is a stylish and extremely functional cutting tool. In his latest Spyderco collaboration, renowned Polish knifemaker Marcin Slysz supercharges this classic design by rendering it with state-of-the-art materials and craftsmanship.
- The SwayBack's hollow-ground Wharncliffe blade is crafted from CTS® XHP stainless steel and has a handsome stonewashed finish. It is housed in an open-backed handle constructed with solid titanium scales. Both scales are beautifully crowned for comfort and the reverse-side scale forms the foundation of a sturdy Reeve Integral Lock (R.I.L.) with a stainless steel interface.
- A polished stainless steel clip provides convenient carry and is reversible for left or right-side tip-up access.
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Top Comments
The days of "products from X country are superior/inferior" are over. I've had a lot of absolute garbage made in the USA (including some subpar knives), and even China pushes out some absolutely stellar quality production knives these days. Chinese brands like We, Reate, Kunwu and Miguron absolutely bring top notch quality to the table, typically competitive at well above their price tag. I'd pay more attention to the specific factory a knife came from, or even specific model reviews than the country, as knives from all countries are all over the board in terms of quality.
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The days of "products from X country are superior/inferior" are over. I've had a lot of absolute garbage made in the USA (including some subpar knives), and even China pushes out some absolutely stellar quality production knives these days. Chinese brands like We, Reate, Kunwu and Miguron absolutely bring top notch quality to the table, typically competitive at well above their price tag. I'd pay more attention to the specific factory a knife came from, or even specific model reviews than the country, as knives from all countries are all over the board in terms of quality.
Spyderco knives have great ergos and the leaf shaped blades are nice and slicey. The only complaint I really have is the action on many of them have not improved much in recent years compared to other brands. Don't get my wrong, you can still easily snap the blade open but they do not exactly drop shut like many of their competitors. They and Benchmade are also pricier than the newer brands making really nice knives.
The days of "products from X country are superior/inferior" are over. I've had a lot of absolute garbage made in the USA (including some subpar knives), and even China pushes out some absolutely stellar quality production knives these days. Chinese brands like We, Reate, Kunwu and Miguron absolutely bring top notch quality to the table, typically competitive at well above their price tag. I'd pay more attention to the specific factory a knife came from, or even specific model reviews than the country, as knives from all countries are all over the board in terms of quality.
I guess I would simply argue the price is too high for Made in Taiwan. You don't have to agree with me; it's totally fine if you don't. To give you an example, though - it would be like Snap-On asking their outrageous prices on a set of sockets that were made in Taiwan. The quality might be world class, and comparable or even better than the USA sockets, but if you're paying $250 + for a set of sockets from Snap-On, you expect them to be made in USA. You'd expect a substantial discount for made in Taiwan, Snap-On sockets.
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Spyderco knives have great ergos and the leaf shaped blades are nice and slicey. The only complaint I really have is the action on many of them have not improved much in recent years compared to other brands. Don't get my wrong, you can still easily snap the blade open but they do not exactly drop shut like many of their competitors. They and Benchmade are also pricier than the newer brands making really nice knives.
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