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(Photo: Leatherman)
Ask me which brand of multitool you should buy, and there鈥檚 only one answer I鈥檓 going to give you: Leatherman. Not only did the Portland, Oregon-based manufacturer invent the segment in 1975, but it continues to make the highest quality, most innovative tools out there. Now, with its first range of quality blade-only knives, Leatherman hopes to put something simpler in your pocket.
Why carry a knife instead of a multitool? After all, most Leathermans already include a blade, amongst all their other tools. That鈥檚 a question the company aimed to find a different answer to with the Arc, a flagship multitool that I reviewed in 2023. What that product got right was the use of the most well-rounded premium blade steel ever鈥MagnaCut. But no matter how sleek, a multitool will never be as comfortable to hold as the handle on a dedicated knife, as easy to carry as a blade-only tool, nor as robust as a fixed-blade knife.
This creates an interesting conundrum for handy folks like you and me: Which should you carry? With this new range of knives, Leatherman invested in a new manufacturing facility (also in Portland) to make that answer, 鈥渁 Leatherman,鈥 no matter what tasks you expect to tackle.
Let鈥檚 talk about the folding knives (both $300) first.
The blade steel is again MagnaCut, which is being widely adopted across the premium knife space thanks to its combination of traditionally incompatible performance metrics: toughness, edge retention, and corrosion resistance. And also because it has a cool name. There are two styles of blade on offer. features a 3.15-inch hollow-ground drop point blade; a hollow 3.0-inch sheepsfoot. Choose the Blazer for all-round use, and pick the Glider if you鈥檙e planning on slicing stuff up near puncture-prone materials like human skin.
Both feature innovative handles that are milled from a block of billet stainless steel in two halves. This approach sets the knives apart from others in the premium space and delivers to the knives a unique feel. Inside each half, you鈥檒l spot skeletonization that saves weight, and allows internal components like the lock, spring, and bushings to be recessed into the handle. This facilitates a slim overall package, but the thing you鈥檒l really notice is that there鈥檚 no space between the blade and either side of the handle. Combined with the chunky steel, you鈥檒l notice a solid-feeling folding knife.
A lack of any additional handle scale material adds to the knive鈥檚 sense of solidity. Rather than bolt a piece of micarta or G10 to the stainless handles, Leatherman instead applies Cerakote, a ceramic coating that鈥檚 virtually impervious to damage.
In contrast to most other folding knives, which have coalesced around one of three locking mechanisms鈥攆rame, Benchmade (which aged out of patent protection recently, leading to widespread adoption), and liner鈥擫eatherman instead opted for a unique 鈥渃ompression wedge鈥 mechanism of its own design. Flick the blade open, and a button on one side of the knife that nominally sits flush with handle slides inwards, blocking the blade from folding closed and causing its opposite side to protrude from the handle. Push that now-external button, and you compress a flat spring mounted inside the milled-out handle internals to move the lock out of the way. Its by far the easiest-to-use locking mechanism I鈥檝e ever tried, and it delivers a solid lockup with the 鈥渨edge鈥 capture by both halves of the handles when the blade is deployed.
Leatherman has designed the folders to be used and carried ambidextrously. That lock button is easily accessible in either hand, and the very strong wire pocket clip is reversible.
Included with the folding knives is a lanyard and button; the latter doubles as a bit driver, and can capture one of Leatherman鈥檚 flat bits through its center, or one end, even with the lanyard cord in place.
I鈥檝e been carrying nothing but the Leatherman Blazer for the last two weeks and can report that it handles packages, light food tasks, and cleaning dog hair out of my vacuum cleaner as well as anything I鈥檝e carried. The point of these premium folders is to do all that while delivering a satisfying feel. At that, the folding Leathermans deliver like knives that cost twice the price.
Compared to the always-there practicality, style, and hand-feel of a folding pocket knife, a fixed-blade is a much simpler tool. You carry one outdoors because they鈥檙e harder to break, easier to clean, and their larger blades are capable of helping with bigger tasks.
Imagine a knife blade as a wedge. A flat-ground blade has straight sides, where a hollow grind results in convex sides. The former is stronger and splits materials apart more efficiently. The latter creates a finer edge that鈥檚 weaker, but capable of finer, more controlled slicing. You choose a flat-ground blade when you have wood to split, and a convex one to process animals and plants.
But grinds are hard to see, and blade tips are very visible. To endow its burliest knife with tough looks, Leatherman gave its hard-use blade鈥斺攁 tanto-style point. But these again have a priority鈥攑uncturing鈥攚hich isn鈥檛 a terribly common task outdoors. So, in giving the Pioneer that tough look paired with the flat grind, Leatherman has optimized the Pioneer for bigger tasks. But its five-inch blade isn鈥檛 enough to split really big logs.
I鈥檝e been testing ($300). Which uses the versatile drop point the Pioneer is missing. More practical? Yes, if you鈥檙e foraging for mushrooms or skinning a deer. At 0.18-inches thick and 4.2 inches long, the convex blade is too thick at for really fine work and too long to reach inside a cavity and feel for the windpipe鈥攚ithout severing anything containing urine or poop.
There鈥檚 also . With its santoku-style blade, it鈥檚 focused on meal prep-tasks, and stands out as the only fixed-blade Leatherman that comes with a full-kydex sheath. My only wish is that it featured a belt loop or carry clip. For one of those, you have to turn to the hybrid leather-kydex item that comes with the Pioneer, but which can only be carried vertically, hanging from a belt, or the all-leather sheath on Trac that鈥檚 too chunky to be carried at all.
But still, all three are big slabs of sharpened Magnacut, and remain appealing options as a result. To the full tang of steel Leatherman bolts slabs of G10 (a slick, but grippy polymer) to serve as handles. Parts of that blade that aren鈥檛 sharp are nicely radiused and feature really deep jimping on the backside to give your fingers something to hang onto.
Leatherman assembles and sharpens all of the knives by hand in its new Portland facility. The fun color combinations, tangible quality, and unique design immediately set them apart. Rather than replacing the Arc multitool I typically carry clipped inside my jeans, Leatherman鈥檚 new knives have me wishing for more pockets.
is your guide to leading a more exciting life in the great outdoors. As 翱耻迟蝉颈诲别鈥檚 outdoor lifestyle columnist, he writes about the intersections of science, news, politics, gear, vehicles and travel, empowering readers to better understand the world they鈥檙e recreating in. Wes lives in Montana with his wife, Virginia McQueen, and their three rescue dogs.