CRKT

CRKT handle scales

CRKT (Columbia River Knife and Tool), a leading American knife brand, was founded in 1994 in Tualatin, Oregon, by Rod Bremer and Paul Gilles. Bremer, a former salesman for Gerber Legendary Blades, saw an opportunity to create high-quality, innovative knives by partnering with top custom knifemakers and producing them affordably overseas

The company's breakthrough came in 1995 with the first production knives designed by Kit Carson (M16 series) and Ron Lake (Lake 111Z folder), introducing patented features like the AutoLAWKS safety and innovative locking mechanisms. CRKT quickly gained traction for blending custom designs with reliable manufacturing in Taiwan and later China

Key milestones include the 2000s explosion of tactical folders like the M16, S.P.E.W., Minimalist, and Provoke (Kinematic 2018), plus iconic collaborations with designers Ken Onion, Jesper Voxnaes, Lucas Burnley, and LionSteel. In 2018, CRKT joined GSM Outdoors (acquired by Marlin Firearms parent), expanding distribution while preserving independent branding

Known for affordable premium EDC knives, tactical folders, fixed blades, and innovative mechanisms (e.g., Deadbolt lock), CRKT remains a benchmark for value, durability, and designer collaborations in the knife industry

69.00

The grips are painted using a special “Lazy Brush” technique. The color palette was developed at GUN GRIPS X SVECHNIKOV WORKSHOP using a secret recipe involving a severed finger. Just kidding! Or not!

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Autumn maple in Japan is a breathtaking spectacle known as momijigari—the ritual of viewing fiery foliage

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Waves crashing on the shore is one of nature’s most mesmerizing spectacles. Each swell rises with graceful power, crests in a frothy curl of white foam, then explodes against the rocks or sands in a thunderous roar

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A timeless Ω emblem of finality, eternity, and achievement across culture, faith, and science

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Stripes in ornament boast a wild history! Once banned in medieval Europe, they marked outcasts—jesters, lepers, prostitutes, even heretics—thanks to a misinterpreted Bible verse against “garments of two.” Zebras were literally seen as devilish! A French cobbler allegedly got executed around 1310 just for wearing striped clothes

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Barbed wire, often called the "devil's rope," symbolizes prison oppression and lost freedom

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The master's hand trembled, and a masterpiece was created. At least, that was the explanation given after the original idea failed. We like it!

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