- Cutting tool that¿s quick, easy and safe
- Features a high-tech ceramic blade that¿s almost as hard as diamonds; lasts longer than steel and never rusts
- Built-in magnet and key-ring hole
- Perfect for scrapbooking, news articles, coupons, art projects and plastic packages
- A portion of the purchase price is donated to fund Autism research
Product Description
Let’s cut to the chase. You need a cutting tool that’s quick, easy and safe. Scrapbooking, news articles, coupons, art projects, plastic packages designed to keep out Houdini – don’t grab scissors or some other weapon of mass destruction. Instead, keep Slice Safety Cutter handy with its high-tech ceramic blade that’s almost as hard as diamonds. You’ll find it just as valuable as you slice through projects with ease and keep your fingers safe and sound. The recessed ceramic blade lasts longer than steel and never rusts. Ever! Add a built-in magnet and key-ring hole, and its two thumbs up for the Slice Safety Cutter. Simple. Sharp. Safe. A portion of the purchase price of the Slice Safety Cutter is donated to fund Autism research.

I use this to slice my coupons and LOVE it! It saves so much time!
Rating: 5 / 5
These series of cutters just recently went into distribution around where I lived within the last two months, and I decided to give this one a shot. True to their words, the little slicer is pocket sized, comes with a tiny ceramic edge (looks like a buck tooth), a little magnet and a hole for a key ring, so you can easily carry it around with you wherever you go (so you know, if you just need to cut something. You never know)
The ceramic blade is very safe, I’ve gone as far as stabbing my hands/fingers, legs, slicing at the same appendages, and even took a bit of a risk by poking delicately at my neck. While I really don’t recommend the last thing, I can say that the blade is really, safe to the touch insofar as humans go. However, buyer beware- the blade WILL scratch everything else. So be careful about the surface you’re cutting on.
For instance, I thought it’d be safe to cut things on a glass table. Nope.
After this mishap, I went ahead to an empty classroom at my university. Wood top? Nope. Wall? Nope. Metal file cabinet? Nope.
If you’re going to use this cutter, make sure you have something underneath it to sustain the damage, otherwise hope that what you’re cutting is contained in something thick enough to absorb the cut.
Cutting is a little difficult as well- you need to hold the slicer at a precise position in order to actually cut, which gets a bit annoying near the end of the slice when your arm starts arcing up naturally. Then you panic because your perfect slice has been ruined, and if you restart you might actually be in a new location, and it won’t be straight, etc etc.
I think that the idea of using ceramic blades is nice, but the way they try to implement this idea is really taking it for a stretch. It’s got its uses, but it really is a limited use. Nothing I’d stick onto my key ring for sure.
Rating: 3 / 5