

THE Little Lulu
Meet the Little Lulu, our first-ever, Made by Knafs knife. Yep, we made this one. Chips flew. Coolant flowed. Dreams got real. The Little Lulu is the culmination of three years of scheming, learning, chickening out, then finally diving headfirst into the deep end of American manufacturing.
If you're looking for a small, capable knife with a big backstory, the Little Lulu is it. It's our roots, our grit, and our adventure spiritโcut sharp and ready for the wild. Born in Utah and named after the rugged Lulu Pass in Montana, this knife is our stubborn little tree growing in the wild. Weโll come back to the tree part.
Designed as a gateway for adventure, the Little Lulu is a small fixed blade knife that features a compact 1.9" MagnaCut blade. Itโs tough enough to feather stick and slice boxes, but not your go-to for chopping firewood or surviving a grizzly standoff. The drop point blade is paired with grippy green micarta scales and a Kydex sheath.
The idea for this knife came to Ben in the Amazon jungle in 2023. He had gone there to test the Original Lulu and happily whittled for hours at a time. But he also had to keep borrowing friends' knives to drill holes and do small tasks. So he started sketching.
He quickly realized the original design was too small in some places, too big in others, and not what he wanted. Back to the drawing board. Again. And Again.
Behind the blade? A story of passion, persistence, and a pinch of madness. We partnered with Alan (someone who actually grew up with Ben) who mills and grinds each knife in his garage. We designed it, sourced the materials, and assembled it with a whole lotta heart at Knafs Mission Control. It's not โMade in USAโ by FTC standards (those are tougher than a Montana winter), but itโs absolutely made by usโour hands, our machines, our crew.
We named the Little Lulu after a rugged area in Montana called Lulu Pass. It's an inhospitable spot full of pine trees, abandoned mines, avalanches, long winters, short summers, and bears both black and grizzly. Life there is a constant fight for survival.
If you're a tree trying to grow in Lulu Pass, you don't care if itโs the right moment because every moment is the right moment. And thatโs how I feel about Knafs and this project. Weโre a stubborn tree, and this Little Lulu is our fight. Weโre thrilled to put it into this wild world.
Drop Point
Green Linen Micarta
CPM MagnaCut
Flat
1.9โ (48.3 mm)
5.2โ (132.0 mm)
.125" (3.18 mm)
.67" (17 mm)
1.8 oz (51g)
Stonewash
63-64 HRC
Made in USA of Domestic and Foreign Parts
KNAFS-00596
This knife has changed my life...My knife skills instantly improved by 50% just by putting this knife on my belt. And then, my skills went up by another 100% when I slapped an Ulticlip on it for pocket carry.
Future Little Lulu Owner
The Little Lulu is brand new...which means, we need your reviews! Pick one up and let us know what you think!
This could be you!

The Little Lulu is the first knife weโve ever made in-house at Knafsโand yeah, weโre still not over it. Itโs the result of three years of dreaming, learning, and finally pulling the trigger on our own CNC mill. We teamed up with our buddy Alan (a manufacturing engineer by day, garage mad scientist by night) and went all in on figuring out the whole process: milling, grinding, sourcing, heat treating, sharpening, assembling. We built a tiny knife ecosystem and started making blades ourselvesโfrom scratch. Every detail of this knife carries our fingerprints, and the amount of love and grit in this thing is hard to overstate.
Soโฆ is it Made in USA? Technically, no. Itโs โMade in USA of Domestic and Foreign Parts.โ Thatโs the legal way to say: we did all the hard stuff here, but thanks to some super strict FTC standards (think โall or virtually allโ of the parts made in the U.S.), we canโt claim it. Let's break that down, according to the parts on this knife:
โขSteel: MagnaCut steel is currently made in USA. However, the parent company Crucible went through bankruptcy and is now owned by the French company Erasteel. Some of the processing on powder metallurgy steel happens in Sweden. This does not meet the "all or virtually all" standard of "Made in USA." However, the steel is rolled, laser cut, milled, ground, stonewashed, and laser engraved in the USA. This is a qualified claim of "Made in USA of Domestic and Foreign Parts."
โขHardware: Sourced from McMaster-Carr (a big 'ol American company) and made in China. The screws and standoffs are not Made in USA.
โขMicarta: Sourced from Masecraft, an American company that sources micarta assembled in the USA from domestic and foreign parts. Masecraft told us the components (resin and linen fabric) come from three different countries. This is a qualified claim of "Made in USA from domestic and foreign parts."
โขKydex: sourced from Knife Kits, an American company selling Kydex, a thermoplastic product. Here's what we learned about their origin claim: KYDEXยฎ Thermoplastic sheet cannot be stated as โMade in USAโ. As with most plastic materials, there are some components that cannot be sourced in the USA and have to be purchased from foreign sources. For example, tin stabilizer is a common component which has not been mined and smelted in the US since the late 1980โs, early 1990โs. So critical components like this can only be obtained by foreign sources. What we can state is that KYDEXยฎ Thermoplastic sheet is โManufactured in USA with a minimum of 90% domestic contentโ.
โขSheath Grommets: made in China.
โขSheath Screws and Hardware: sourced from Ulticlip.
โขBox: sourced from Flexpack in Woods Cross, Utah. Made in USA.
We have tried very, very hard to trace the supply chains on every part included on this knife. It's absolutely globalized, and we learned that "all or virtually all" of the parts of the Little Lulu are NOT made in USA. We made this knife ourselves. We watched the steel cut in Syracuse, Utah. We loaded parts into machines we own and tried not to breathe micarta dust. We shipped to Idaho for heat treat, and we surface ground in Springville, Utah. We assembled and sharpened in our shop in Clearfield, Utah. Our American blood, sweat, tears, hopes, and wild dreams are in this knife.

CPM MagnaCut is a game-changer in the world of knife steels, and itโs a big reason why the Little Lulu punches way above its weight class. Designed by Larrin Thomasโa metallurgist with deep roots in both science and the knife worldโMagnaCut was engineered from the ground up specifically for knives. Larrin wanted a steel that could balance wear resistance, toughness, and corrosion resistance without the usual compromises. What he ended up creating was a stainless powder metallurgy steel that delivers exceptional edge retention and durability, all while laughing in the face of rust.
One of the most impressive things about MagnaCut is how well it balances the holy trinity of knife steel properties: hardness, toughness, and corrosion resistance. Traditional stainless steels tend to sacrifice toughness for corrosion resistance or lose edge retention. But MagnaCut threads the needle. It has ultra-fine carbides thanks to the CPM (Crucible Particle Metallurgy) process, which means it can hold a razor-sharp edge longer, resist chipping, and still be easy to maintain. In a compact, fixed blade like the Little Lulu that is built for day-in, day-out EDC tasks, that kind of steel is exactly what you want in your corner.
For us at Knafs, using MagnaCut in the Little Lulu was a no-brainer. It supports the knifeโs mission: be small, scrappy, and ready for anything. Whether youโre out hiking, opening boxes, or whittling by a campfire, youโre carrying a steel thatโs at the top of its gameโdesigned by a knife nerd for knife nerds. And yeah, thatโs exactly our vibe.

The Little Lulu may be small, but donโt let that fool you--itโs a powerhouse in a compact package. With a 1.9" blade and an overall length of just 5.2", this fixed blade is purpose-built for low-profile, everyday carry. It slips easily into your pocket, neck knife rig, or backpack without hogging space or weighing you down. Whether youโre cracking open boxes, cutting cordage, or carving up kindling, the Little Lulu is ready for it all, without announcing itself like a full-size survival blade.
This knife was born from real use, specifically, long hours in the Amazon jungle with too few tools and too many whittling projects. That experience helped us dial in the size to hit a sweet spot: small enough for fine work, but large enough to be genuinely useful. The handle is designed to give you solid grip and control but shows up big when you need it.
The Little Lulu isnโt here to replace your big bushcraft blade, itโs here to complement it. Think of it as your trusty sidekick: fast, agile, and always on hand for the everyday moments where precision matters more than brute force.
The Little Lulu is the first knife weโve ever made in-house at Knafsโand yeah, weโre still not over it. Itโs the result of three years of dreaming, learning, and finally pulling the trigger on our own CNC mill. We teamed up with our buddy Alan (a manufacturing engineer by day, garage mad scientist by night) and went all in on figuring out the whole process: milling, grinding, sourcing, heat treating, sharpening, assembling. We built a tiny knife ecosystem and started making blades ourselvesโfrom scratch. Every detail of this knife carries our fingerprints, and the amount of love and grit in this thing is hard to overstate.
Soโฆ is it Made in USA? Technically, no. Itโs โMade in USA of Domestic and Foreign Parts.โ Thatโs the legal way to say: we did all the hard stuff here, but thanks to some super strict FTC standards (think โall or virtually allโ of the parts made in the U.S.), we canโt claim it. Let's break that down, according to the parts on this knife:
โขSteel: MagnaCut steel is currently made in USA. However, the parent company Crucible went through bankruptcy and is now owned by the French company Erasteel. Some of the processing on powder metallurgy steel happens in Sweden. This does not meet the "all or virtually all" standard of "Made in USA." However, the steel is rolled, laser cut, milled, ground, stonewashed, and laser engraved in the USA. This is a qualified claim of "Made in USA of Domestic and Foreign Parts."
โขHardware: Sourced from McMaster-Carr (a big 'ol American company) and made in China. The screws and standoffs are not Made in USA.
โขMicarta: Sourced from Masecraft, an American company that sources micarta assembled in the USA from domestic and foreign parts. Masecraft told us the components (resin and linen fabric) come from three different countries. This is a qualified claim of "Made in USA from domestic and foreign parts."
โขKydex: sourced from Knife Kits, an American company selling Kydex, a thermoplastic product. Here's what we learned about their origin claim: KYDEXยฎ Thermoplastic sheet cannot be stated as โMade in USAโ. As with most plastic materials, there are some components that cannot be sourced in the USA and have to be purchased from foreign sources. For example, tin stabilizer is a common component which has not been mined and smelted in the US since the late 1980โs, early 1990โs. So critical components like this can only be obtained by foreign sources. What we can state is that KYDEXยฎ Thermoplastic sheet is โManufactured in USA with a minimum of 90% domestic contentโ.
โขSheath Grommets: made in China.
โขSheath Screws and Hardware: sourced from Ulticlip.
โขBox: sourced from Flexpack in Woods Cross, Utah. Made in USA.
We have tried very, very hard to trace the supply chains on every part included on this knife. It's absolutely globalized, and we learned that "all or virtually all" of the parts of the Little Lulu are NOT made in USA. We made this knife ourselves. We watched the steel cut in Syracuse, Utah. We loaded parts into machines we own and tried not to breathe micarta dust. We shipped to Idaho for heat treat, and we surface ground in Springville, Utah. We assembled and sharpened in our shop in Clearfield, Utah. Our American blood, sweat, tears, hopes, and wild dreams are in this knife.
CPM MagnaCut is a game-changer in the world of knife steels, and itโs a big reason why the Little Lulu punches way above its weight class. Designed by Larrin Thomasโa metallurgist with deep roots in both science and the knife worldโMagnaCut was engineered from the ground up specifically for knives. Larrin wanted a steel that could balance wear resistance, toughness, and corrosion resistance without the usual compromises. What he ended up creating was a stainless powder metallurgy steel that delivers exceptional edge retention and durability, all while laughing in the face of rust.
One of the most impressive things about MagnaCut is how well it balances the holy trinity of knife steel properties: hardness, toughness, and corrosion resistance. Traditional stainless steels tend to sacrifice toughness for corrosion resistance or lose edge retention. But MagnaCut threads the needle. It has ultra-fine carbides thanks to the CPM (Crucible Particle Metallurgy) process, which means it can hold a razor-sharp edge longer, resist chipping, and still be easy to maintain. In a compact, fixed blade like the Little Lulu that is built for day-in, day-out EDC tasks, that kind of steel is exactly what you want in your corner.
For us at Knafs, using MagnaCut in the Little Lulu was a no-brainer. It supports the knifeโs mission: be small, scrappy, and ready for anything. Whether youโre out hiking, opening boxes, or whittling by a campfire, youโre carrying a steel thatโs at the top of its gameโdesigned by a knife nerd for knife nerds. And yeah, thatโs exactly our vibe.
The Little Lulu may be small, but donโt let that fool you--itโs a powerhouse in a compact package. With a 1.9" blade and an overall length of just 5.2", this fixed blade is purpose-built for low-profile, everyday carry. It slips easily into your pocket, neck knife rig, or backpack without hogging space or weighing you down. Whether youโre cracking open boxes, cutting cordage, or carving up kindling, the Little Lulu is ready for it all, without announcing itself like a full-size survival blade.
This knife was born from real use, specifically, long hours in the Amazon jungle with too few tools and too many whittling projects. That experience helped us dial in the size to hit a sweet spot: small enough for fine work, but large enough to be genuinely useful. The handle is designed to give you solid grip and control but shows up big when you need it.
The Little Lulu isnโt here to replace your big bushcraft blade, itโs here to complement it. Think of it as your trusty sidekick: fast, agile, and always on hand for the everyday moments where precision matters more than brute force.



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