Description:
A Whisper of Steel and Shadow
Imagine a shadow bent into a blade, 9.75 inches (24.77cm) of quiet menace, the Gil Hibben Polished Karambit rests light at 6.4oz (181g), a phantom forged by a man whose name echoes through steel’s lore: Gil Hibben. Picture the black leather sheath—soft as a secret, stamped with his mark, ready to be shown off. Unsheath it, and the world tilts: 5.375 inches (13.65cm) of 5Cr15MoV stainless steel arcs into view, polished until it drinks light and spits it back, a surface that mocks rust and begs to be displayed.
Now trace your eyes to the grip—4.375 inches (11.1cm) of black linen Micarta, a weave of night held fast by nickel pins that gleam like caught stars. It’s full tang, unyielding, a spine that could endure chaos but dreams instead of stillness. The curve of it, the way it sits, dares you to hold it. This Karambit yearns for a pedestal, a glass shrine where its sheen and shadow play for the collector’s soul.
Hibben didn’t carve this for the mud it’s a hymn to the craft, a 5.375-inch (13.65cm) blade and 4.375-inch (11.1cm) handle fused into 9.75 inches (24.77cm) of poised artistry at 6.4oz (181g). Envision it perched high, light licking its edge, Micarta brooding beneath—a relic that could cut but shines brighter untested. For those who gather treasures, who chase the rare, this is your quarry. Don’t let it slip—a blade this alive belongs in your gallery, not another’s grasp.