This Case XX Trapper pocket knife with yellow synthetic handles is assembled in Bradford, Pennsylvania using Case’s Tru-Sharp high-carbon steel — takes a finer edge than stainless and sharpens easily, but develops a patina with use that collectors value as part of the knife’s character. The knife is a two-blade pocket knife with a clip and spey blade — the Trapper is Case’s most collected pattern, designed originally for fur trappers who needed both a skinning spey and a utility clip in one knife.
The handle is yellow synthetic handles — the classic Case ‘yellow handle’ color since the 1950s — Case’s handle patterns are part of why collectors identify knives decades after manufacture. Everyday use keeps the knife sharp and develops the character Case collectors value. Clean after wet use, oil the pivot occasionally, and the knife will outlast its owner.
W.R. Case & Sons has been making pocket knives in Bradford, Pennsylvania since 1889 — the longest continuously operating American cutlery company. Every knife is assembled at the Bradford factory from American steel, and Case knives are one of the most collected American pocket knives in the country: tang stamps indicate the manufacturing year, and condition-graded knives trade among collectors decades after original sale.






