Personalised Opinel Knives
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FAQ - Branded Opinel Knives
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Choosing the number is the first decision on Branded Opinel Knives
The size you pick is set before any artwork. The number on the ferrule decides both how the knife sits in a recipient's pocket and how much handle you have to engrave. A No.6 carries a blade around 7cm and reads as a slim everyday carry. The No.7 steps up a touch. The No.8, at roughly 8.5cm, is the one most buyers picture when they think Opinel, and it is the usual corporate choice for that reason.
Go a size larger and the brief changes. A No.9 gives a fuller blade and a longer handle that fills the hand. That suits an outdoor, estate or trade list whose recipients want a working folder rather than a token. The longer handle also gives the engrave more room to breathe. We confirm the live numbered models in stock when you order, since the carbon and stainless versions of each size move independently.
| Opinel model | Approx. blade | Reads as | Typical recipient |
|---|---|---|---|
| No.6 | Around 7cm | Slim everyday carry | Lighter pocket, event giveaway |
| No.7 | Around 8cm | A small all-rounder | Mixed gift list |
| No.8 | Around 8.5cm | The everyday classic | The default corporate folder |
| No.9 | Larger again | A working outdoor folder | Estate, outdoor or trade list |
The Virobloc collar that defines Custom Knives by Opinel
Twist the stainless ring at the base of the blade and the Opinel locks, either open for use or shut for the pocket. That ring is the Virobloc, patented in 1955 and fitted to the No.6 and every size above it. It is the mechanism a knife buyer knows the brand by. It turns a plain friction folder into a locking knife without adding a single button or liner.
It also shapes what we will and will not touch. Your logo goes on the beech, never on the collar, the ferrule or the blade etch, so the lock keeps working exactly as the maker intended. We mark only the handle flank between the rivet and the ring. The five elements that make the knife fold, the blade, the handle, the ferrule, the rivet and the Virobloc, leave us as Opinel assembled them.
Engraving the beech handle on folding Personalised Knives
How we engrave Personalised Knives on beech
The varnished beech handle is the whole personalisation surface, and it takes a laser engrave the way few gift materials do. The beam burns a crisp brown line down into the grain, so the logo becomes part of the timber instead of a surface layer that could flake away. It is single-tone by nature, which is why a clean wordmark or a tight emblem reads far better than fine serifs that blur on wood.
The handle is also narrow, so the engrave runs as one line, not a block of text. The maker's gifting service treats roughly twenty characters as the working ceiling, and a corporate run lives inside the same limit: a short wordmark sits, a strap-line spills. The smaller numbers tighten that further, since a No.6 flank gives less room than a No.9. We proof bold vector artwork against your chosen size first, so the line suits the timber it has to sit on.
- Laser-engrave a company wordmark along the beech handle flank
- Add a single initial and a date for a named long-service folder
- Keep the mark clear of the rivet, ferrule and Virobloc collar
- Size the artwork to the model, a No.6 holds less than a No.9
- Proof bold vector text first, fine serifs blur on the grain
- Mark the blade ricasso discreetly only where the handle must stay bare
Where a brand colour will not sit on beech Branded Knives
Bare beech holds a tonal engrave and nothing more, so a brand that lives on an exact colour needs the colour carried elsewhere. The wood will not take a true Pantone, and pretending it will only disappoints at proof stage. We say so up front and route the colour to a surface that can hold it.
Opinel runs colour-handled and varnished versions of the folding knife, and a pad print lays one or two spot colours onto those coated handles where the model allows. Where the knife itself must stay natural beech, a printed presentation sleeve carries the full-colour brand around the gift without a mark on the timber. The route depends entirely on the handle you settle on, so we set the method against that specific folder before quoting it.
| Opinel surface | Method that suits it | Result | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bare varnished beech | Laser engrave | Tonal brown line in the grain | The default, ink-free, lasting |
| Coloured or coated handle | Pad print | One or two spot colours | Model-dependent, confirmed per item |
| Blade ricasso | Discreet engrave | Small mark, handle left bare | Lower units, for named gifts |
| Presentation sleeve | Full-colour print | Brand panel around the gift | Used when beech stays natural |
Why Branded Opinel Knives beat a plain engraved folder
Open-market Branded Knives do the job, but they carry none of the recognition the Opinel shape holds for someone who knows knives. The beech handle, the bulbous ferrule and the twist of the Virobloc place it as the French everyday knife kept in a drawer or a coat pocket for decades. Your logo travels on an object the recipient already trusts before they read it.
That is the trade against our wider catalogue. Branded knives from the open market give you a free hand on blade profile, locking system and scale material at a lower unit price. The numbered Opinel changes none of those. Reach for that page when the brief wants format choice and a keen budget above all. Reach for the numbered folder when the beech-and-Virobloc pocket knife is the thing the recipient is meant to keep.
Carbon or stainless: the steel choice on Custom Knives
Each numbered Opinel comes in two blade steels, and the choice is worth making before the order, not after. The carbone version takes and holds a very keen edge but will patina and spot if left damp, so it suits a recipient who maintains a blade. The INOX stainless version, ground from Sandvik steel, resists corrosion and forgives neglect. It is the safer pick for a broad gift list who may leave the knife in a glovebox.
The decision sits with the audience, not the logo, since both steels take the same engrave on these Branded Knives. A food or outdoor brand gifting genuine users often wants carbon for the edge. A wide, mixed corporate list usually wants stainless so the knife still looks new a year on. We confirm which steel is in stock for your chosen size, because availability of carbon and stainless shifts per model.
A golf club, a society or a member-facing brand can hand out a slim stainless No.6 that tucks into a bag alongside Personalised Golf Gifts. The stainless blade spares a casual recipient the upkeep carbon would ask, while the French name still does its work.
Personalised Knives for gifting, from food trade to outdoor list
Custom Knives for food, outdoor and estate lists
A vineyard, a deli or an artisan food brand can put 150 engraved No.8 Branded Knives into the hands of trade buyers who will genuinely use the blade. The warm beech feels chosen rather than corporate, which lands with a hospitality or culinary crowd in a way a steel multi-tool never quite does. One logo repeated across every handle also keeps the run straightforward to produce.
Step up to a No.9 and the gift speaks to a working recipient. An estate, a forestry or an outdoor-kit brand can put a longer locking folder in the hands of people who want a real knife in a coat pocket. Personalised keyrings clip a branded fob to the same set for a recipient who carries a small Opinel and a tag together. The audience and the size decide the model before the budget does.
| Gifting occasion | Suggested Opinel knife | Why it fits | Steel that suits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Food, wine or deli trade gift | No.8 folder | Recognised, used in the kitchen | Carbon for the edge |
| Broad mixed corporate list | No.8 folder | Low-care, looks new for years | Stainless INOX |
| Outdoor or estate brand | No.9 folder | Longer locking working knife | Stainless INOX |
| Lighter event giveaway | No.6 folder | Slim, lower unit spend | Either, by stock |
| Named long-service award | No.8 with name and date | Personal, kept for years | Buyer's preference |
The crowned-hand stamp stays on our Branded Knives, your logo joins it
Look at the blade of any genuine Opinel and you find the crowned-hand mark, the Main Couronnée the maker has stamped on its branded knives for generations. We leave it exactly there. Your client's logo joins the knife on the beech handle by an approved engrave, so two marks share one folder: Opinel's on the steel, yours in the wood. We are a personalisation supplier and nothing more, with no tie, blessing or official standing with the maker.
Opinel decides for itself where a third-party mark may sit on its branded knives, as makers of its standing tend to. We therefore fix the engrave zone against the exact numbered model before production rather than pledging a placement we are not cleared to give. If a chosen line turns out engrave-only on a given panel, you read it in the quote and not after sign-off.
Minimum order and timing on a run of Branded Opinel Knives
A run of Branded Knives from the numbered Opinel range carries a catch worth stating plainly. Because we buy and decorate finished Opinel knives rather than blank stock, the minimum sits above an unbranded run and the timeline runs longer. Opinel's own business-gift service opens bulk orders at roughly 100 units, a fair figure to plan a single-size run around. Send the brief and a costed quote is back inside a day, so your dates can be fixed early.
The timing then turns on the size mix and the steel. A single-model engraved No.8 run in one steel clears faster than a brief that mixes No.6, No.8 and No.9 across both carbon and stainless. Per-piece names add individual handling on top, since each handle is set up separately. We pin a real delivery window to your actual spec instead of quoting one blanket lead time that ignores how many numbers and steels are in play.
| Order shape | Typical fit | Lead-time pressure |
|---|---|---|
| Single-size engraved No.8 run | Food or trade thank-you | Lower, one model and steel |
| No.9 outdoor run | Estate or outdoor brand | Moderate, stock-dependent |
| Mixed No.6 to No.9 brief | Several gift tiers at once | Higher, sizes and steels to align |
| Per-piece named folder | Long-service or milestone | Higher, individual handling |
UK rules on sending folding Custom Knives
Because the Virobloc lets the blade lock open, a folding Opinel is treated as a locking knife and an age-restricted sale here. The verification belongs to us at despatch, not to whoever opens the parcel. Recipients are confirmed as 18 or over before the folder ships, and no piece travels to an unverified or under-age address. An Opinel is a working pocket tool and a gift to keep, not a weapon, and that adult-only check follows every order to the door.
It bites hardest on the No.8 and No.9, the sizes a recipient actually carries, so it runs on every bladed piece without exception. Matching the right number to your audience is something we will advise on. The law around carry is not, and that sits with the recipient once the knife is theirs. What we take on outright is the age gate on each folder, handled before it leaves us so nobody downstream has to.
Confirming the steel and wood on Branded Opinel Knives
Before a buyer repeats anything about the steel or the wood to their own recipients, they want it to be true. On the folding range we stay with what is documented. Opinel offers these branded knives in carbon and Sandvik stainless steel with a varnished beech handle. The beech for the folding line is widely described as French-sourced, with the exact detail printed on that model's current data sheet, which we send on request.
Past what Opinel itself publishes we hold the line. The category and the figures on the maker's sheet are all we put forward, and a number we cannot stand behind is labelled unconfirmed, never invented to fill a gap. The sheet goes to your procurement team in its original form, not reworded into something more flattering than the facts allow.
Presenting single Personalised Knives as a finished gift
Lone Branded Knives stand up as a gift on their own, but just as readily head a fuller presentation for an executive or an incoming hire. Engraved beech plus a printed sleeve hand you two things at once: the permanent mark burned into the wood and a colour-rich brand panel wrapping the outside. That split keeps the knife itself uncluttered while the sleeve carries the artwork, which is the look a deal-close or a first-day welcome wants.
For a dining-led list that wants the mark across more than the pocket knife, Personalised cutlery can reuse the same engraved logo file from the folder run. A culinary brand then carries one identity from the worktop to the table.
Drop a folder into a box and the adult-only despatch rule still rides with us, kit or no kit. The assembled gift goes out to a verified business address as one parcel, so the blade need not be peeled off into a separate shipment. The age check stays our job rather than yours.
A hospitality or food brief is where the folder shows its keepsake value. Slipped into a food hamper, an Opinel is the one tool a recipient keeps long after the food is gone.
A fitted recess holds the folder closed with the crowned-hand mark facing up, sized to the exact No.6, No.8 or No.9 so nothing rattles in transit. The recipient sees the knife before they lift it out.
Where the folder and its companions should land together under your mark, a Corporate Gift Boxes build seats the knife with everything that rounds out the gift. The finished box leaves us as a single adult-verified parcel rather than a handful of loose items.















































