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$20.60
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Prickly Porky Ceramic Knob

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Ceramic Knob

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Style: Ceramic Knob

Spruce up cabinets and furniture and take your decorating game to the next level by customising your own knobs. From the kitchen to your child’s bedroom, custom knobs are the perfect accent that can complement any décor.

  • Beautiful 3.8 cm wide white ceramic knobs.
  • Standard size; fits most 3.2 cm diameter holes.
  • Easy installation.
  • Includes screw. No additional hardware required.
  • Great for cabinets, drawers, and furniture.
  • Perfect finishing touch to bedrooms, kitchens, DIY projects and more!
  • This product has small parts and is not a toy. Not recommended for children 8 and below.

About This Design

Prickly Porky Ceramic Knob

Prickly Porky Ceramic Knob

Features a porcupine. You may change the background colour. A porcupine is any of 29 species of rodent from a number of families. Porcupines are indigenous to the Americas, southern Asia, and Africa. Porcupines are the third largest of the rodents, behind the capybara and the beaver. Most porcupines are about 25–36 in (63–91 cm) long, with an 8–10 in (20–25 cm) long tail. Weighing between 12–35 lb (5.4–16 kg), they are rounded, large and slow. Porcupines come in various shades of brown, grey, and the unusual white. Porcupines' spiny protection resembles that of the unrelated hedgehogs and echidnas. The name porcupine comes from Middle French porc espin (spined pig) A regional American name for the animal is quill pig. The North American porcupine, Erethizon dorsatum, has the northernmost range of all the world's porcupines. Evidence indicates that they have only been a part of North American fauna sincemillion they immigrated north from South America some three million years ago. Porcupines are 25 to 31 inches long covered with hair and quills of varying length, except on the foot pads and nose. The tips of the long guard hairs are lighter and give the coat hues of yellow or white. The hair and a thick layer of body fat helps keep the porcupine warm during the winter. The tail is extremely muscular and adapted to aid in climbing and defence. The upper surface of the tail is heavily covered with quills, while the underside is covered in bristle-like hairs used to aid in climbing. The quilled pelage of the porcupine makes it unique among North American mammals. Quills cover the body, except on the legs and belly. The quills are modified hairs which have microscopic barbs on the tips and are filled with a spongy matrix. Quills from different parts of the body vary in length, flexibility, colour, shaft diameter, and barb length. The average weight of an adult male porcupine ranges from 15 to 18 pounds, but some individuals can weigh up to 30 pounds. Adult females weigh about 2-4 pounds less than males. Porcupine have excellent senses of smell, hearing, and taste, but relatively poor eyesight. Porcupines make a wide variety of sounds ranging from whimpers to screams, depending upon the circumstance. Breeding takes place in the fall months from late September to early November. Males seeking receptive females expand their home ranges up to five times the normal size. If more than one male shows interest in the same female, they will fight for the opportunity to mate with the female. Males use their incisor teeth and quills when fighting, and usually it is the largest and heaviest male which wins dominance. The breeding male then splashes the female with urine. If she is not ready to mate, she shakes off the urine and leaves. If she is ready, she stays and the male mounts in the traditional posture with the female in front and the male in the rear. She will curl her tail over her back, covering most of the quills. Males reach maturity at 24 months and females at 12 months. After a gestation period of about 210 days, only a single young is born. The gestation period is extremely long for a rodent, twice the time for a beaver. At birth the young weighs between 1 and 2 pounds and is about 10 inches long. Its eyes are open and its body covered with long grayish-black hairs and quills. Within a matter of hours the quills dry and serve as protection. The young porcupine is then capable of following its mother, although the young will not be able to climb large trees for several weeks. The young are able to eat some vegetation after a few weeks, but the female continues nursing the young for 3.5 months. During the summer the young stay close to their mothers, learning about den sites and food trees, but towards the end of summer they start to spend more time apart. By October, when the female mates again, the young are fully weaned and wander off to face the winter alone. Porcupines utilise natural cavities, such as rock caves, hollow logs and trees, or even the thicker vegetation in a tree as dens. In areas without snowfall, dens are not used so much. Porcupines stay active throughout the winter. Porcupines are primarily arboreal, and spend most of their time in the winter feeding in trees. While powerful climbers, porcupines do occasionally fall from trees. Thirty percent of the animals examined in one study showed evidence of healed fractures indicating that they had fallen out of trees. When climbing, the porcupine uses the stiff bristles on the undersurface of the tail as support. The animal has long, curved front claws which also aid in climbing. The inner bark (phloem and cambium layers) of spruce, birch and hemlock and spruce needles are the major winter foods for porcupine living in Alaska. In the spring and summer, buds and young green leaves of birch, aspen, cottonwood and willow are eaten until the tannin levels build too high for the porcupine to tolerate. Because they are vegetarians and most vegetable matter is very low in sodium, porcupines need additional sodium in the blood to balance cell potassium levels. As a result, porcupines seek out salt sources such as natural licks, glue which bonds plywood together, human perspiration on tools, road salt, and some paints. Porcupines also feed on shed antlers and the bones of dead animals to obtain sodium and calcium. Most carnivores would not pass up a meal of porcupine. However, an encounter between a young inexperienced predator and a porcupine can be a very painful experience. Some unfortunate carnivores have starved to death because a mouthful of quills has prevented them from eating. In an effort to remove the quills, the predator can cause the barbed quills to work into the deep tissues. Predators have different means of killing and eating porcupines. In the Northeast United States, the fisher has learned to specialise on a diet of porcupine. The fisher circles around the porcupine until it can bite its nose. After repeated bites to the nose, the fisher then flips the porcupine over to attack the quill-free belly. The porcupine is then eaten leaving an empty quill-covered skin. This method may also be practiced by lynx, wolves, coyotes, and wolverines which have been recorded eating porcupines in Alaska. When the porcupine is relaxed, the hair and quills lie flat and point backwards. When threatened, the porcupine draws up the skin of the back to expose quills facing all directions, and it then presents its formidable bristling back. The porcupine tries to keep its back facing the attacker and strikes back and forth with its tail. Contrary to popular belief, a porcupine can not throw its quills. However, quills are readily dislodged on impact which may give the impression that quills can be thrown. The porcupine can be easily approached and killed with a club because of its plodding gait. This trait has saved the lives of hungry Natives, trappers, and miners in times past. Some people find the meat too strong, but in some areas of the state, porcupines with their heavy layer of fat are considered a delicacy. Quills sewn onto deerskin used to be the trading wampum of the Northeastern Indian tribes. Quills are still used for decoration by the Athabaskans of Interior Alaska. Natives used to kill porcupines just for their quills, but today Alaska Natives corner the animal and then tap the back of the animal with a styrofoam paddle to collect all the quills they need. The quills are dyed with locally obtainable vegetable materials and then sewn into skin clothing, earrings, and artistic items. Porcupines can be injurious to commercial forests and reforestation projects by feeding on the terminal buds or eating the bark all the way around the trees. When such problems occur, site specific control may be necessary, although within most of Alaska porcupines are not numerous enough to do much damage.

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars rating228 Total Reviews
204 total 5-star reviews13 total 4-star reviews2 total 3-star reviews2 total 2-star reviews7 total 1-star reviews
228 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Sharon F.20 April 2023Verified Purchase
Ceramic Knob
Creator Review
I have created and ordered hundreds of knobs on my Zazzle store, and I've been thrilled with all. The fairy series though is exceptional. Sure, the clarity on my porthole windows, seashells, etc. was perfect; yet, when I opened the package and saw these, I was mesmerized. I stared at them off and on all night wondering how they could print such beautiful absolutely perfect details without a flaw ... the color, the eyes, the overall product considering how small the knobs are and how detailed the little fairies are which cannot be seen in my photos even. These are perfect for a child's room, for furniture to give a Victorian look, and I am ordering the entire series to eventually use on a dresser as well as wood strips (2 or 3 at a time) to make hangers for jewelry and clothing. If yours turn out like mine, you'll be amazed. My photos do not do the knobs justice. Another Zazzle hit above and beyond perfection! I keep asking myself how they did it. Yes, to print an anchor or seashell on a small ceramic knob has always been beautiful with Zazzle; yet, how on earth did they catch every detail in the eyes, face, etc. of these? Kudos to the printers! Again, my photos do not do the knobs justice. The product is exactly as the photo you see on the product page for sale.
from zazzle.com (US)
4 out of 5 stars rating
By J.29 March 2018Verified Purchase
Ceramic Knob
Zazzle Reviewer Program
We used this as the handle for a box we made to hold our clients beloved Springer's ashes. The wording and image was perfect for the application. The clarity of the image is descent for the size.
from zazzle.com (US)
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Sheila J.3 July 2021Verified Purchase
Ceramic Knob
Creator Review
These cabinet knobs are high-quality ceramic knobs. This was the first time we ordered them from here, and we will order again, when we remodel our bathroom. THEY CAME OUT FABULOUS!! We ordered a dozen of these for a cabinet we were refinishing, in 12 different designs, and this bathroom design came out great! Perfect cabinet knobs to freshen up any dresser or bathroom.
from zazzle.com (US)

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Product ID: 256342585156154207
Posted on 17/02/2025, 12:22 PM
Rating: G