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This Tungsten-tipped Nutcracker Works On Walnuts, Seafood, and even Car Windows in an Emergency

Think for a moment about three common tools: the nutcracker that sends shell fragments flying across the room, the bulky hammer you have to retrieve for the simple task of hanging a photo, and the emergency window breaker you bought for your car but have since forgotten about. Each serves a purpose, yet each comes with its own inconvenience, whether it’s mess, cumbersomeness, or the simple fact that it’s never around when you actually need it. These are the kinds of minor but persistent frustrations that we tend to accept as normal, the small design flaws in our daily routines.

The Hamtel was born from a refusal to accept those flaws. It was conceived as a direct answer to these distinct problems, elegantly combining their solutions into a single, compact device. Its core function is a spring-loaded impact mechanism that cracks nuts with precision, eliminating mess and preserving the kernel. With a simple adjustment, that same tool becomes a capable mini-hammer for light-duty tasks. Finally, its tungsten steel tip provides the reliable performance of a dedicated car safety hammer, creating a single tool that is practical enough for daily use and critical in an emergency.

Designer: Hamtel

Click Here to Buy Now: $66 $124 (47% off) Hurry! Only 9 days left.

The real draw for anyone with an appreciation for good gear is the sheer tactile satisfaction of its action. You pull back the plunger to arm the manganese alloy steel spring, a process that feels deliberate and mechanical, like chambering a round. Placing the tip on the target and pressing down unleashes an explosive force reportedly moving at over 530 meters per second. This impact-driven deployment is what separates it from every dull lever-action cracker on the market. It’s a clean, contained, and frankly, an incredibly cool way to apply force. This is the kind of thoughtful engineering that gets EDC enthusiasts talking, turning a mundane kitchen task into an opportunity to use a well-made instrument.

The body is stainless steel, providing a solid, weighted feel in the hand, while the business end features a high-hardness tungsten steel tip rated at HRC60+. This is the material specification you expect in high-end cutting tools or industrial equipment, not something designed to crack walnuts. This choice is critical for its dual-purpose role as a car window breaker, ensuring the tip remains sharp and effective even after repeated use. That effectively means your walnut or macadamia or brazil nut stands absolutely no chance. The tip works remarkably well against seafood too, letting you crack into crab and lobster claws/shells without breaking out industrial equipment.

This precision translates directly to its performance in the kitchen. It boasts a 95% kernel preservation rate, a number that seems ambitious until you consider the physics at play. Instead of crushing a shell with slow, brute force, the Hamtel delivers a sharp, localized impact that fractures the shell without pulverizing the contents. This makes it just as effective for delicate jobs, like cracking open crab legs or lobster claws without shredding the meat inside. It brings a surprising level of finesse to a category of tools typically defined by their crudeness, making it a genuinely useful upgrade for any kitchen.

Initial pricing puts the Hamtel at $66, which is a compelling entry point considering its planned retail is set at $124. Logistics are refreshingly simple, with a flat $9 shipping fee for delivery anywhere in the world. An optional nut pick can be added for just a few dollars, making it a complete package for dealing with stubborn shells. For the price of a single-purpose emergency tool, you’re getting a device that serves three distinct functions, some life-changing, others life-saving. But for most of the time, bon appetit!

Click Here to Buy Now: $66 $124 (47% off) Hurry! Only 9 days left.

The post This Tungsten-tipped Nutcracker Works On Walnuts, Seafood, and even Car Windows in an Emergency first appeared on Yanko Design.

7 EDC Upgrades Every Guy Needs Now That Winter Is Finally Over

Winter pockets are forgiving. Thick jackets and layered coats offer deep storage, and the cold discourages the kind of outdoor tinkering that puts your gear to the test. Spring strips all of that away. Lighter clothing means fewer pockets, tighter fits, and a sudden reckoning with whatever you have been carrying for the past four months. The transition is a forced audit, and most people discover their loadout has gotten lazy, bloated, or both.

These seven products approach everyday carry from the direction that matters most once the temperature rises: density of function in the smallest possible footprint. No redundant tools. No objects that exist only to look tactical on a desk. Every item here earns its pocket space by solving a specific problem with engineering that is tight enough to disappear into a spring carry without adding bulk—time to swap out the winter loadout for something sharper.

1. ScytheBlade

The curved blade of a scythe does not seem like an obvious candidate for pocket carry, but the ScytheBlade makes it work through radical miniaturization. This titanium folding knife borrows the Grim Reaper’s iconic profile and compresses it into something closer to a tiger claw, creating a blade shape that looks aggressive because it is. At just 46mm when deployed, the ScytheBlade challenges the assumption that effective cutting tools need generous proportions. The curve concentrates force along its edge in ways that straight blades cannot replicate, and that geometry turns a small blade into something disproportionately capable.

Titanium construction keeps the weight to 8 grams, making it barely noticeable when clipped to a pocket. The material also offers corrosion resistance without requiring the constant oiling and maintenance that carbon steel demands, a real advantage for spring carriers when rain and humidity are part of the daily equation. The engineering here is in the confidence to go small. Most EDC knife makers chase longer blades and heavier locks to project seriousness. The ScytheBlade proves the opposite: that an unconventional blade geometry, executed at a micro scale with the right material, outperforms bulk.

What we like

  • At 8 grams in titanium, it disappears into a pocket and removes the excuse to leave a knife at home.
  • The curved blade concentrates cutting force in a way that straight-edge micro knives cannot match, making it more capable than its 46mm length suggests.

What we dislike

  • The 46mm blade length limits what the knife can realistically handle; anything thicker than a zip tie or packing tape will push its limits.
  • The scythe profile is polarizing, and its aggressive look may draw attention in settings where a discreet blade would be preferable.

2. Arcos Driver

Ratchet screwdrivers work well in open spaces. The problem is that screws rarely live in open space. They sit in recessed housings, tucked behind cables, angled into corners where a straight driver either cannot reach or forces an awkward wrist contortion that strips heads. The Arcos Driver addresses this with a folding titanium body that adjusts to 0, 30, 60, or 90 degrees, allowing the tool to adapt its geometry to match the access angle rather than requiring the user to twist around it.

Inside is a three-mode ratchet system: forward for driving with consistent torque, reverse for clean removal, and a fixed-lock mode for stable, precise control when the screw matters more than speed. Integrated bit storage keeps everything in one unit, which is the kind of detail that separates a tool you actually carry from one that lives in a drawer. The titanium build brings strength without the weight penalty that steel ratchets impose, and the folding mechanism locks securely enough at each angle to feel confident under load. Spring means more outdoor projects, more furniture assembly on balconies, and more repairs that winter made easy to postpone. The Arcos Driver fits all of that into a carry-friendly package.

Click Here to Buy Now: $99 $155 (36% off). Hurry, only 15 days left! Raised over $62,000.

What we like

  • Four distinct folding angles mean access to screws in tight, awkward spaces without the wrist strain that straight drivers cause.
  • Integrated bit storage keeps the tool self-contained, so there is no fumbling through a separate bit case mid-task.

What we dislike

  • Kickstarter-funded tools carry inherent delivery uncertainty, and backers should factor in the risk of timeline delays.
  • The folding mechanism adds complexity that could develop play over time, particularly at the 30-degree position where lateral force is highest.

3. Pockitrod

The tactical pen market is full of cylinders that add one feature (usually a glass breaker) to a writing instrument and call it innovation. The Pockitrod is a different animal. Its 6061-T4 aluminum body is machined with a hex cross-section that doubles as a driver grip, and the tool system inside is genuinely modular: a central driver assembly housed within the handle, a box opener with interchangeable 20CV steel tips, an inkless writing implement, and a magnetic-base LED flashlight that threads on as an extension module.

Etched measurement markings along the body function as a built-in ruler, with the zero-reference aligned to the edge for practical, real-world measuring rather than decorative engraving. The pen form factor is the smartest part of the design. A pen lives in a shirt pocket or a bag without raising questions. Nobody looks twice at it. But when work starts, the hex body locks into a bit the same way a proper driver handle would, and the modular extensions transform a pocket pen into a lighting, cutting, and fastening system. It respects the classic pen silhouette while fundamentally expanding what that silhouette can do.

What we like

  • The hex-profile aluminum body works as a genuine driver grip, not a marketing claim; it locks onto bits with the same positive engagement as a dedicated tool.
  • Modular extensions (LED, box opener, driver) thread onto a single pen body, consolidating multiple pocket tools into one.

What we dislike

  • Modularity means more pieces to keep track of, and losing a single extension reduces the tool’s value proposition.
  • The 6061-T4 aluminum is lighter than steel but also softer, meaning the hex edges will eventually round with heavy driver use.

4. AirTag Carabiner

Losing keys is a winter problem that follows people into spring because nobody upgraded their keychain. This carabiner, made from Duralumin composite alloy (the same material used in aircraft and marine construction), is designed to house an Apple AirTag while clipping onto bags, bikes, umbrellas, or whatever tends to wander. The material choice matters because most AirTag holders are silicone or plastic, which means they degrade, stretch, and eventually drop the tag entirely.

Each unit is individually handcrafted from high-quality metal, and the carabiner is also available in untreated brass and stainless steel. The Duralumin version brings water and altitude resistance suited to actual outdoor conditions, not just controlled indoor environments. Spring carry means more time outside, more chances to leave something on a park bench or a cafe table, and a tracking solution that clips seamlessly onto whatever bag or gear you are carrying makes the transition from indoors to outdoors less risky. The lightweight form hides the fact that the alloy underneath is built to handle far harsher conditions than a keychain typically encounters.

Click Here to Buy Now: $129.00

What we like

  • Duralumin composite alloy provides aircraft-grade durability in a form factor that adds almost no perceptible weight to a bag or keyring.
  • Handcrafted metal construction outlasts silicone and plastic AirTag holders, which tend to stretch and lose grip over months of use.

What we dislike

  • Apple AirTag is not included, so the total cost of entry includes both the carabiner and the tag itself.
  • The tracking functionality is Apple ecosystem only, leaving Android users without a compatible option.

5. Fingertip-sized Rechargeable Flashlight

World’s smallest is a claim that usually comes with an asterisk. This flashlight, built as a DIY experiment by YouTube channel Gadget Industry, skips the asterisk. It sits on the tip of a finger. Inside that resin shell: a lithium-polymer battery, a charging circuit, a touch-based control system, and a white LED. That is a fully rechargeable, functional light source condensed into a form factor that most people would mistake for a button.

The scale alone is the point. In a crowded EDC landscape where flashlights compete on lumens, beam distance, and tactical modes, this micro torch takes the opposite approach. It prioritizes presence over power: a light source so small that it will always be with you, because forgetting it is almost impossible. Spring evenings still get dark, and the gap between leaving work and arriving home often involves poorly lit stairwells, parking garages, or bike paths. A light that lives permanently on a keychain or in a coin pocket fills that gap without adding any detectable weight. It is a reminder that miniaturization itself can be the innovation.

What we like

  • The form factor is so small that it can live permanently on a keychain without adding bulk, which means it is always available.
  • Fully rechargeable with touch controls, so there are no disposable batteries and no physical switches to break.

What we dislike

  • As a DIY build from a YouTube channel, it is not commercially available, which limits accessibility to viewers willing to replicate the project.
  • The tiny lithium-polymer battery means the runtime is limited, and the light output is functional rather than powerful.

6. Titaner Swing Ratchet System

Most ratchets need at least 15 to 30 degrees of swing to engage the next tooth. In tight spaces, that range is the difference between completing a turn and stalling. The Titaner swing ratchet compresses that arc to 4 degrees, which means it can operate in gaps where conventional ratchets physically cannot cycle. Both sides of the ratchet core are functional, with CNC-engraved directional markers (one side locks, the other releases) for intuitive control without trial-and-error guessing.

At 29.8 grams, the system weighs 40% less than traditional ratchets while delivering full torque. The modular design allows different driver heads and bit configurations, so the same core handles multiple fastener types without carrying separate tools. Spring projects (tightening deck furniture, adjusting bike components, assembling outdoor gear) tend to involve screws in confined or partially accessible locations. A ratchet that fits those conditions at under 30 grams is the kind of tool that justifies its pocket space every week rather than sitting idle waiting for a big job. The precision here is not about power. It is about access.

What we like

  • A 4-degree swing arc allows the ratchet to function in spaces so tight that standard ratchets cannot even begin to cycle.
  • At 29.8 grams, it is 40% lighter than traditional ratchets, making it realistic for daily pocket carry rather than toolbox-only storage.

What we dislike

  • Ultra-compact ratchet heads can feel less confident under heavy torque loads compared to full-sized counterparts.

7. Cubik

Knife designers typically rely on springs, flippers, or complex bearing systems to get a blade open. The Cubik discards all of that in favor of gravity. Press the trigger, hold it upside down, and the blade drops into position. Release the trigger, and it locks. This mechanism eliminates the springs that rust, bearings that fail, and maintenance cycles that plague traditional folders. The knife works with physics rather than fighting it, and the satisfying weight of the blade swinging into place feels like the mechanism earned its simplicity.

That simplicity does not mean weakness. The Cubik locks firmly enough to pierce hardwood, which puts it in functional territory that most gravity-deploy designs cannot reach. The tungsten carbide glass breaker integrated into the rear end transforms what could be a gentleman’s folder into a legitimate emergency tool. When most EDC knives chase complexity through additional deployment systems, assisted-open mechanisms, and axis locks, the Cubik goes the other direction. One moving part. One material is doing the heavy lifting. The result is a knife with fewer failure points and a deployment method that never gets old to use.

What we like

  • Spring-free gravity deployment means zero mechanical parts that can rust, jam, or wear out over years of daily use.
  • The integrated tungsten carbide glass breaker elevates the knife from an everyday cutter to a genuine emergency tool.

What we dislike

  • Gravity deployment requires the knife to be held upside down, which is slower than a spring-assisted or flipper-based opening in time-sensitive situations.
  • The legal status of gravity knives varies by jurisdiction, and some regions classify them differently from standard folding knives.

Lighter pockets, sharper choices

The shift from winter to spring is not about adding gear. It is about compressing a function into less space. Thinner jackets, shorter pockets, and more time outdoors demand a loadout that earns its presence through utility rather than just occupying real estate. These seven tools share a design philosophy rooted in that compression: titanium, where weight matters; modularity, where versatility matters; and miniaturization, where pocket space is the constraint.

Spring carry is a constraint worth designing for. The tools that survive the seasonal edit are the ones that do their job without reminding anyone they exist, until the moment they are needed. That is the entire point of everyday carry, and these seven understand it.

The post 7 EDC Upgrades Every Guy Needs Now That Winter Is Finally Over first appeared on Yanko Design.

This titanium ‘Spork’ multitool packs 6 functions in a single unibody design

Daily utility meets design in EDC multitools. And here at Yanko Design, we have this knack for recognizing the best tools for you, which would provide advanced features and excellent value when you need them. In the market flooded with multitools that are designed to fold and twist, Prometheus Design Werx has surprised the demanding with the stunning idea of the SPD Ti-Spork Chop – a multitool in its own unibody design.

While multitools that fold and feature pull-out accessories from the body are a common sight, it is unusual for a multitool to arrive in a one-piece design with construction that’s durable enough to withstand whatever you can throw at it. Looking at the Ti-Spork Chop, you can instantly count it out as a viable pocket tool, but spare a thought and read further before you arrive at a conclusion.

Designer: Prometheus Design Werx

The look of the Ti-Spork Chop is self-explanatory of what the design entails. But the first thing that can disturb many is how to fit that EDC into the pocket. To ensure that it is possible and effortless, the one-piece multitool features a pocket clip to hold it in place inside the pocket. And when you’re unsure of having it in the pocket, the tool’s lanyard hole makes carrying it worry-free. The look may not obviously suggest, but this tool has six built-in functions.

It obviously starts with the combination of a spoon and fork in the front, which clearly wins it the word ‘Spork’ (combination of spoon and fork) in its name. Besides, making it a valuable EDC for casual campers and serious adventurers are features like the bottle opener, box/can opener, and a prybar. Of course, the pocket clip on one side and the lanyard in the middle are other notable options that make the tool even more handy.

Describing various scenarios in which the multitool can be used, the company notes, “Whether you’re shoveling canned peaches, stirring your precious hot cup of instant coffee with powdered creamer in some remote, dangerous corner of the world, or opening a bottle of Jarritos, our Ti-Spork Chop has got you covered.” It’s “A titanium spork to rule them all…” the company website reads.

All these tools are packed on a Ti-Spork Chop that’s milled from a single piece of 6AL-4V grade-5 titanium. The construction makes it highly durable and exceptionally resistant to corrosion. The design, as opposed to that of other folding multitools, ensures that it is easy to clean. Weighing roughly 30g and measuring about 4.72 inches long, the lightweight but incredibly robust Prometheus Design Werx multitool is available on the company website for only $79.

The post This titanium ‘Spork’ multitool packs 6 functions in a single unibody design first appeared on Yanko Design.

Upgrade Your Victorinox 58mm Army Knife Into a Fully Modular, Snap‑On Multitool Ecosystem in 10 Seconds

The 58mm Swiss Army Knife has occupied pockets for over a century with the same basic formula: red plastic scales, a handful of tools, and a design language that never needed to change. Victorinox perfected compact utility decades ago, and the format became so synonymous with everyday carry that entire generations never questioned whether it could evolve. But that permanence also created a constraint. Once you chose your tool configuration, you were locked in. Swapping scales meant glue, risk, or permanent modification.

Keyport’s Versa58 system breaks that constraint without breaking the knife. The platform introduces a snap-on interface that attaches to any 58mm SAK’s existing rivets, transforming fixed scales into swappable modules. Add a rechargeable LED light, a mini pen, a USB-C flash drive, or a deep-carry pocket clip in seconds. Remove them just as fast. The knife stays intact, the heritage remains untouched, but the capabilities expand in ways the original designers never imagined. It’s modularity meeting tradition, and somehow both sides win.

Designer: Keyport, Inc.

Click Here to Buy Now: $39 $60 (35% off). Hurry! Only 2 left of 75.

The core of this entire system is a deceptively simple piece of spring steel. This patent-pending interface plate is the result of a full year of development and seven complete revisions, a process that speaks to the engineering challenge involved. The plate is engineered to flex just enough to click securely onto the mushroom-shaped rivets that hold a standard SAK together, the same ones hidden beneath the factory scales. The design had to be robust enough to handle repeated attachment cycles without loosening, yet gentle enough to avoid damaging the knife’s frame. It’s a tool-free, glue-free, and completely reversible process that takes seconds. This single component unlocks the entire platform.

Versa58 operates in two distinct universes. The first is as a direct upgrade to your existing Victorinox. You pop off the original scales and snap on the Versa58 modules you need for the day. The second universe is completely independent of the knife. Using a magnetic connector system called MagMount, any two modules can be attached to each other to create standalone tools. This dual functionality means you can either enhance the classic SAK you already own or build an entirely new, minimalist multi-tool from scratch. The system offers a level of flexibility that the 58mm format has never seen before.

The MagMount system is absolute genius, using three tuned neodymium magnets to create a crisp, satisfying connection. This allows for the quick assembly of pocketable rigs or keychain tools. You could, for instance, snap the flashlight module to the pen module for a compact, non-knife tool perfect for travel or restrictive environments. The magnetic pull is tuned for a secure hold while still allowing for smooth rotation and easy reconfiguration. It also introduces an addictive fidget factor, turning the act of customizing your carry into something tactile and engaging. It’s a smart design that expands the ecosystem beyond the knife itself.

Among the first wave of modules, the Clip Scale is likely to be the most celebrated. Machined from either 6061 aluminum or Grade 5 titanium, it finally adds a clean, low-profile pocket clip to the 58mm SAK. This has been a common request in the EDC community for years. Crucially, the clip is designed to be reversible and does not interfere with the knife’s keyring, a flaw seen in some aftermarket solutions. It’s paired with a V Scale for the front, which includes a multi-use slot designed to hold the original SAK’s toothpick or tweezers, ensuring you don’t lose core functionality.

The Pocket Flare module brings modern illumination to the platform. It’s a compact, USB-C rechargeable light with a beam tuned for close-range tasks. It offers three modes: a 3-lumen low beam with a 12-hour runtime, a 43-lumen high beam that runs for two hours, and a 45-lumen side light that acts as a lamp to brighten a small area. Because it uses the MagMount interface, you can also snap it onto any metal surface for hands-free lighting, which is incredibly useful for repairs or finding something in a dark tent.

Keyport also developed modules that bridge the analog and digital worlds. The Pen Module features a precision mini pen with a premium German Troika refill, offering a smooth writing experience without any rattle. For digital needs, there is a streamlined USB-C 3.0 flash drive module available in 64GB and 256GB capacities. This flip-out drive seamlessly integrates secure, portable storage into your pocket setup for documents, media, or backups. These additions transform the classic pocket knife into a tool that feels much more relevant to modern daily life.

Perhaps the most forward-thinking aspect of the Versa58 platform is its openness. Keyport will be selling standalone interface plates, inviting makers, modders, and machinists to design their own compatible modules. This opens the door for a community-driven ecosystem of custom tools built on the Versa58 standard. It’s a canvas for creativity, allowing anyone with an idea to contribute to the platform. This move could give the system incredible longevity and a range of options far beyond what Keyport could develop on its own.

Keyport has already outlined a roadmap for future modules, showing a long-term commitment to the system. Upcoming additions being explored include a Bluetooth locator, an NFC module for digital access or automation, a craft blade for precision cuts, and even a minimalist carrier for a Bic lighter. The plan is to build Versa58 into a comprehensive platform, not just a single product release. Backer feedback from the initial campaign will help shape which of these new tools get prioritized, making early adopters part of the development process.

The Versa58 system is available for backing on Kickstarter, with special pricing tiers for early supporters. The campaign offers several bundles, including the foundational Origin Bundle with the core scales starting at $39 and the more comprehensive Apex Bundle that adds the Pocket Flare module starting at $77. All modules and scales are available in either machined 6061 aluminum or the more premium Grade 5 titanium. The Versa58 ships globally starting August 2026.

Click Here to Buy Now: $39 $60 (35% off). Hurry! Only 2 left of 75.

The post Upgrade Your Victorinox 58mm Army Knife Into a Fully Modular, Snap‑On Multitool Ecosystem in 10 Seconds first appeared on Yanko Design.

Today I Learned That Zippo Makes EDC Multitools Too

You look at certain companies and just instantly a product comes to mind. When you hear the word Yamaha, the vast population thinks ‘Motorcycles’, when you hear Bose, you think ‘Speakers’, and when you hear Zippo, you instantly think of ‘Lighters’. Well, Yamaha also makes some top-notch pianos, Bose has an entire flourishing division of shock-absorbing truck seats, and Zippo also happens to make EDC tools!

Meet the Zippo Bit Safe Screwdriver Insert – a multitool designed to fit inside your lighter. The company basically looked at its iconic lighter and thought, ‘Hey, what if we developed modules for it?’ To that end, the Bit Safe Screwdriver Insert is a 4-bit multitool that fits right into your standard Zippo lighter case. Flip it open and instead of the flame or the burner, you’re greeted with a screwdriver that you can then use to tighten and loosen stuff, repair gadgets, and be a total tinkerer. The insert works intuitively, and doesn’t have any igniting abilities, which means this might be the only Zippo you can carry into an airport!

Designer: Zippo

Click Here to Buy Now

Now I’m not entirely sure what makes a man cooler – whipping out a lighter, or whipping out a screwdriver and fixing something… but Zippo has both those grounds covered. The Bit Safe Screwdriver Insert is a nifty EDC module that attaches into any spare Zippo case you may have lying around. It’s compatible with all Zippo  Classic cases, as per the website, and provides storage for 3 bits, along with a mounting bracket for 1 bit. A magnetic insert holds all the bits in place, and to get working, all you need to do is just flip the lighter open and get rotating.

I recommend keeping the lighter case on for most activities (it looks cooler), but there are times when the lighter’s lid may come in the way. That’s when you just remove the Bit Safe insert and use it like a flat-grip driver. Put it back and the insert clicks into place, echoing a familiar Zippo user experience.

Each Bit Safe comes with 4 bits – #1 Phillips, #2 Phillips, #2 Flat, and T20 Torx. The outer shell itself is made from aluminum (with the famous Zippo lid hinge), while the bits themselves are made from tool-grade steel. The bits are your standard hex bits, so you could potentially swap them out for other bits that you constantly find yourself using.

The insert costs under $15 and makes for a pretty nifty piece of EDC. There’s a bit of an illusion at play here, as people just assume you’re pulling a Zippo lighter out of your pocket, only to reveal that it’s actually an EDC multitool. If you’re a Zippo aficionado, this insert’s a great way to make use of any old cases you may have lying around. Zippo, if you’re reading this, make a power bank insert next! Imagine flipping the lid open to reveal a USB-C port!

Click Here to Buy Now

The post Today I Learned That Zippo Makes EDC Multitools Too first appeared on Yanko Design.

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