SKU: 21400237995

Damascus Steel USA Flag Outdoor Knife — Wave Pattern Blade, American Flag Resin Handle

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Description

Damascus Steel USA Flag Outdoor Knife — Wave Pattern Blade, American Flag Resin HandleThis Damascus outdoor knife measures 9 inches overall with a 5 inch wave pattern blade and a 4 inch American flag resin handle. The red, white, and blue stars and stripes pattern runs through the full depth of the resin material. The handle uses clean resin scales with no bolster or pins. A burgundy leather sheath with tan stitching and an embossed JW SteelCrafts stamp is included for safe belt carry and field storage. This is the only Damascus

This Damascus outdoor knife measures 9 inches overall with a 5-inch wave-pattern blade and a 4-inch American flag resin handle. The red, white, and blue stars and stripes pattern runs through the full depth of the resin material. The handle uses clean resin scales with no bolster or pins. A burgundy leather sheath with tan stitching and an embossed JW SteelCrafts stamp is included for safe belt carry and field storage.

This is the only Damascus outdoor knife at JW Steel Crafts with a wave pattern blade and a clean American flag resin handle in this 9-inch no-bolster configuration.

The History Behind This Blade

The American flag became a symbol on working knives after World War II, when custom makers began building patriotic handles into field blades as a mark of pride in American craft. The tradition grew strongest in hunting and outdoor knife culture — where a flag handle on a Damascus blade meant the knife was both a working tool and a statement piece. Wave pattern Damascus entered that tradition through the layered steel forging methods passed down from Middle Eastern and Japanese blade culture. The JW Steel Crafts wave pattern Damascus outdoor knife carries both of those traditions in every forged blade.

Blade Performance

The blade is forged from layered Damascus steel in a wave pattern finish. The wave pattern forms during forging when the layered steel billet is drawn and folded repeatedly before final shaping, creating flowing curved lines across the full blade flat. The layered structure builds consistent edge retention and cutting strength through repeated outdoor and field use. The drop point profile gives you a wide belly for skinning and slicing alongside a controlled tip for precise piercing and detail work. Full tang construction runs through the entire flag handle and spreads weight evenly from blade tip to handle base for stable and controlled cutting throughout field use.

Handle Construction

The handle is shaped from American flag resin. The red, white, and blue stars and stripes pattern runs through the full depth of the resin material — it does not fade, chip, or peel through outdoor or field use. Resin does not absorb moisture, does not swell or crack, and holds its surface finish through heavy field conditions. The clean scale design carries no bolster or pins, giving this knife a lighter, streamlined profile compared to bolstered flag handle knives in the store. The grip stays firm and controlled bare-handed or gloved through extended outdoor use.

Leather Sheath

The burgundy leather sheath features tan hand-stitching and an embossed JW SteelCrafts stamp across the front. It protects the blade during carry and storage and fits securely on a belt for field access during hunting and outdoor use.

Best Used For

  • Hunting, field dressing, and outdoor utility tasks

  • Camping and bushcraft carry with patriotic American styling

  • EDC outdoor carry in a lightweight no-bolster configuration

  • Collectors of wave pattern Damascus USA flag knives

  • Gifting for veterans, hunters, Father's Day, and patriots

Specifications

Feature

Details

Overall Length

~9 inches

Blade Length

~5 inches

Handle Length

~4 inches

Blade Material

Wave pattern Damascus steel

Blade Profile

Drop point

Handle Material

American flag resin

Handle Detail

Clean resin scales, no bolster or pins

Construction

Full tang

Sheath

Burgundy leather, tan stitching, embossed stamp

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a wave pattern Damascus blade? 

The wave pattern forms when layered steel is drawn and folded during forging, creating flowing curved lines across the blade flat — distinct from raindrop or ladder Damascus patterns.

Is the American flag pattern on the handle permanent?

Yes. The stars and stripes pattern runs through the full depth of the resin. It does not fade, chip, or peel through outdoor or daily use.

What does the drop point blade profile do?

The wide belly handles skinning and slicing. The controlled tip gives you precise piercing and detail work — covering more outdoor tasks than a straight-edge blade alone.

Is the leather sheath included?

Yes. The burgundy leather sheath with tan stitching and embossed stamp is included for safe belt carry and field storage.

Is this knife full tang?

Yes. The tang runs the full length of the flag resin handle for strength, balance, and long-term durability.

Is this a good patriotic gift?

Yes. The wave pattern Damascus blade, American flag handle, and burgundy leather sheath make this a strong gift for Father's Day, veterans, hunters, and Damascus knife collectors.

How do I care for this knife?

Hand wash and dry immediately after use. Apply food-safe mineral oil to the blade occasionally. Store in the leather sheath in a dry place. Never put it in a dishwasher.


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SKU: 21400237995

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4.3 ★★★★★
Based on 223 reviews
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M
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mad_buyer
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Outstanding book that lays out a blueprint for communist China's war against the US
A short book that sometimes slips into expressions that take a little time to understand, the two political officers that wrote this book had truly studied US (and western) military campaigns and political movements in order to develop strategies to defeat the west without kinetic warfare. While I (like most others, I believe) understood that CCP wanted to take advantage of the US and have region dominance, this book really opened my eyes. I'll merely list the areas in which these two political officers promoted engagement against the US/west - actions that many (including myself) never realizing these were acts of "unrestricted" and comprehensive warfare. The list: diplomatic warfare financial warfare conventional warfare network warfare trade warfare bio-chemical warfare intelligence warfare resource warfare ecological warfare psychological warfare economic aid warfare space warfare tactical warfare regulatory warfare electronic warfare smuggling warfare sanction warfare guerrilla warfare drug warfare media warfare terrorist warfare virtual warfare (deterrence) ideological warfare fabrication warfare cultural warfare international law warfare atomic warfare Of course, as one recognizes these listed arenas of engagement communist China has with the US, remember that espionage and propaganda play key roles in all of these areas. While the US seeks to counter communist China individually in several of these areas, we have to realize that it is a comprehensive strategy that the CCP is pursuing. Remember this book was published in 1999. What has each side engaged in since then? Epiphanal!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2022
W
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Walter W. Olson, Ph.D, P.E.
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 3
A military reading: The cover is misleading
This book is purported to be a translation of China’s Masterplan to Destroy America written by two Colonels in the People’s Liberation Army in 1999. There is reason, but not confirmed, to doubt this. The authors of the book are clearly Chinese. Whether or not the authors are Colonels in the PLA, I feel, is in doubt, as such a plan would never be available to Western sources as quickly as it was after drafting. The book is no “master plan.” It is a discussion of modern warfare strategy written by readers of the worldwide military strategy publications. Most of the publications have been in the United States and China. The cover of this book is misleading with the statement, “Wake up, America.” This book should be little interest to the non-military American. But it should be read by anyone with potential requirements for field grade service (Major and above,) or higher (and equivalent strategy levels in the Marines, Air Force, and Navy.) As far as “Wake Up,” I can recall discussions about strategy that contained most of the information provided within the book as a staff field grade officer in the US Army. While as military officers, we need to be aware of these issues, we are not entirely ignorant of them. The book provides a somewhat different perspective of the issues from a Chinese viewpoint. The first point the authors make, how technology precedes its best employment in warfare. Most of the technology discussed concerns the information processing capabilities of both computers and software. It is more than computerized warfare. A large part of this is based on the technology to US Forces but not entirely. Part of the problem with technology is that mankind becomes so used to using technology to solve today’s problems that previous methods of solving problems are lost. Thus, if the technology can be crippled, it represents an exploitable weakness in war. The second point made, is that the military forces now must consider nonmilitary actions if it is to be effective in both defense and offense. Warfare developed from point battlefields (using swords, knives, etc.,) to linear battlefields (using machine guns and artillery,) to area battlefields, to 3D battlefields (using aircraft and missiles,) to modern infinite-dimensional battlefields which include space, electromagnetic spectrums, and civilian actions. If one can start a war in a computer room or a stock exchange, is there a non-battle space anywhere? Warfare that transcends military boundaries is “unrestricted warfare.” A “kinder warfare” with critical attacks that take no lives is now possible. Technology is providing a means to attack and enemy’s nerve centers without directly harming anything else. Such nerve centers exist in an enemy’s financial systems, their economic systems, their environmental systems, their public media systems, their political systems, their power and energy systems, and their logistics centers. A third point made is that coalitions of disparate forces, internationally, nationally, and military, are formed and broken very quickly, as quickly as within 24 hours! For example, in Desert Storm, the United States weaved together more than 30 nations in various roles. The author’s prescient comment foresaw the alignments that occurred immediately following the 9/11 attack, although this was after the book was written and not available to the authors to use as an example. There was also unity of command established. This, the authors say, stemmed from the US DoD Reorganization Act passed by Congress in 1986. All of the air forces and naval forces were under General Schwartzkopf despite the desires of the individual forces to operate independently. The air tasking order (a 300-page document) drafted in joint sessions by the Air Force, Navy and Marines, had to be approved by General Schwartzkopf before commands were issued to the various forces. The Kuwaiti Invasion Plan that the Marines wanted was put off in favor of the plan that General Schwartzkopf endorsed. Media personnel were incorporated into the military units but controlled with definitions of release timing and content. A fourth point is that Americans want wars which achieve its national interests while having no causalities. This promotes an over-reliance on technology and an unwillingness to support prolonged war. Americans have a blind faith in technology always thinking that the road to victory is with the highest technology weapons. American military budgets are based largely on the acquisition of expensive weapon systems, and little thought given to their integrated use within the military services. American military theory is behind (consistent with point one above.) But the overriding goal is victory without casualties. Thus, the authors recommend that the secret to war with America is to kill its rank and file soldiers. The style of the book is somewhat elliptical: it is written in the Chinese manner which often dances around a subject before coming to its subject. For example, there is a discussion of the Golden Ratio (1:0.618) before the authors show how it can be found in various ancient and modern military operations. There is considerable Chinese military philosophy discussed including the 36 Strategies, which most American military readers have not encountered ( did not at West Point when I was a Cadet studying Chinese!) I first encountered these after a reference from a Chinese Professor while I was teaching in China and then read Sun Tzu in Chinese. Sun Tzu was not the original author of these. In my personal opinion, an English translation this short book should be required reading for all Cadets at West Point. I rate the book 3 stars for several reasons. I don’t feel the book is well written. Many of the references are transliterations of the author’s names in Chinese which do not read as the real names. At this time, the book is somewhat dated having been written in 1999. I also doubt the attribution of the source and authors of the book. The concepts presented in the book are worth thinking about for a person developing military strategies.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2019
B
Verified Purchase
Beth Rohl
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
No complaints
Format: Paperback
Knowledge is power and everybody should read this book
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2025
C
Verified Purchase
Cita
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Fascinating and beautifully written.
Format: Hardcover
Clear and compelling reading of the much-neglected history of Carthage -- all its histories had been written by the victors in Rome. BTEW y four-colour photo insert was missing a page....shame on Norton, the puboisher.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2026
N
Verified Purchase
Nana & Granddad
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
Excellent Overview of Carthage
Format: Hardcover
293 pages of text/maps/b&w figures; 8 pages of color plates; 15 pages of end notes (mostly citations); 20 page Bibliography; 6 page Primary Bibliography; 2 page Acknowledgements; 8 area maps; 1 battle map [Cannae]. This is a well written history of Carthage. It provides a one source overview of the background and history of the city/empire. As a reasonably well read layperson, I am familiar at an overview level with the Punic Wars, Rome, Alexander, and the Alexandrine successor states and this book packaged Carthaginian information very well while adding interesting information that I hadn't come across before. I was somewhat disappointed (hence the 4 star rather than 5 star rating) that there was a very limited drill down to a lower level of detail, particularly from such a noted author. However, this is probably an unfair criticism given the limited amount of archeological information available and the millennia of effort that has been spent in pigeonholing Carthage according to the desired perceptions. I recommend the book highly as a well written overview of Carthage.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2026

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