
Work Sharp built its reputation on belt sharpeners and guided systems, not blades. On June 5, 2026, the Madrone changed that conversation. At $179.95, the new EDC folder pairs an M390 clip point blade with an integral aluminum handle machined in-house at the company’s Oregon facility.
Price: $179.95
Where to Buy: Work Sharp
On paper, the numbers land where enthusiasts want them. The blade measures 3.25 inches, the overall open length is 7.65 inches, and the closed length is 4.4 inches. Total weight sits at 3.3 ounces, which puts it in the same pocket-weight class as popular EDC folders we have covered before.
The knife ships in three Cerakote finishes: Black, Blue Titanium, and Copper Suede. All three share the same hardware, the same reversible deep-carry clip, and the same lifetime warranty. Each unit is built in Oregon. Work Sharp handles final assembly, sharpening, and QC stateside, while some materials are sourced abroad.
What Integral Construction Means for a $180 Knife
Integral handles are rare under $200. Most folders in this range use two separate scales bolted to a liner or frame, which creates seams, screws, and potential failure points. The Madrone’s handle is machined from a single billet of aluminum, so the body is one continuous piece.
Fewer parts means fewer failure points. On the Madrone, that translates to no extra handle scales to loosen and no unnecessary parts to lose during maintenance. The company claims this creates what it calls “no weak points prone to failure.”
Manual or Automatic: What the Box Actually Includes
The Madrone arrives as a manual button-lock folder. Inside the box, Work Sharp includes the components needed to convert it to push-button automatic operation. You can swap the configuration yourself without sending the knife back to the factory.
That flexibility of the Madrone Clip Point EDC Folding Knife comes with a legal catch. Work Sharp ships the Madrone as a manual folder to navigate federal and state auto-knife restrictions (per HiConsumption’s launch coverage). The conversion is your responsibility, and the included components handle the swap.
The button lock operates in both configurations. In manual mode, the blade deploys via thumb opener); in automatic mode, a press of the button fires the blade open. Either way, the lock holds the blade secure when open and when closed.
If you live in a state with strict automatic knife laws, the manual setup is perfectly serviceable. Anyone considering the auto conversion should review their state’s knife laws first. Automatic-knife rules vary widely.

M390 Steel and the Daily Carry Reality
M390 steel is the blade material here. Work Sharp says the alloy was chosen for strong edge retention and corrosion resistance, which translates to less time touching up and more time cutting. That matters if you open packages daily.
The blade hardness is rated at 60 to 62 HRC, and the edge angle is set at 20 degrees from the factory. Pairing the Madrone with one of Work Sharp’s pocket sharpeners is a natural follow-up purchase.
On the carry side, the deep-carry pocket clip is reversible and positions the knife tip-up. At 3.3 ounces, the Madrone disappears into a pocket about as well as any full-size folder can. The handle thickness is 0.5 inches, so it doesn’t create a bulky print.
Pricing, Colorways, and Availability
Pricing is straightforward. The Madrone costs $179.95 and ships free on orders over $99, which means this knife qualifies. Work Sharp is limiting purchases to two knives per customer while quantities last.
Three finishes are available at launch: Black Cerakote, Blue Titanium Cerakote, and Copper Suede Cerakote. All share the same satin bead-blast blade finish and the same hardware. No exclusive colorway upsells exist, and no limited-edition pricing tiers complicate the decision.
The Bottom Line
The bottom line is that Work Sharp is making a serious play for your EDC rotation. The Madrone is not a sharpener company’s side project. Work Sharp pitches the Madrone at owners who carry, use, and service their own gear rather than collectors who keep blades on a shelf.
On paper, the spec sheet checks every box: premium steel, integral handle, convertible action, and sub-$200 pricing. Whether the Madrone earns a lasting slot in established EDC rotations will become clearer as longer-term carry impressions surface from the knife community.

Price: $179.95
Where to Buy: Work Sharp
If you’ve been waiting for a new EDC release that justifies its price with hardware rather than hype, the Madrone is worth considering.






