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Radial outward-ridged spike array — porcupine spines fanning from a low cylindrical bowl, sunburst from above.

Quill

A ring of printed spines for a plant that already has its own.

$32

Quill bristles outward in radial ridges, each spine rising from a tight base and tapering to a blunt point. The result reads as a porcupine in profile and a sunburst from above. The raised ridges shade the wall and cast moving lines across your desk as light shifts, while a recessed drainage hole and a low-profile catch saucer keep the surface dry. Run a thumb across the spines and you feel every layer line — the geometry is the texture.

Material
Color · Terracotta
1
Dimensions
H 95mm × Ø 110mm (spine tip to tip). Central drainage hole with a press-fit low-profile catch saucer included.
Plant pairing
Built for Haworthia and other tight rosette succulents — Haworthiopsis, small Gasteria, or a young echeveria. The compact bowl keeps roots snug and the spines echo the plant's own pointed form.
Materials
Matte PLA, Recycled PETG, Wood-Fill PLA
The story

Quill came from pairing armor with armor. A Haworthia carries its own defensive geometry in tight rosettes and pointed leaves, so the pot answers in kind — a printed mantle of spines that frames the plant instead of softening it. The ridges aren't ornament alone; they brace the thin wall against warping and break up reflected light so the matte surface stays calm rather than glossy.