A fleuron (/หflสษrษn, -ษn, หflษหrษn, -ษn/[1]), also known as printers' flower, is a typographic element, or glyph, used either as a punctuation mark or as an ornament for typographic compositions. Fleurons are stylized forms of flowers or leaves; the term derives from the Old French: floron ("flower").[2] Robert Bringhurst in The Elements of Typographic Style calls the forms "horticultural dingbats".[3] A commonly encountered fleuron is the โฆ, the floral heart or hedera (ivy leaf). It is also known as an aldus leaf (after Italian Renaissance printer Aldus Manutius).
History
Flower decorations are among the oldest typographic ornaments. A fleuron can also be used to fill the white space that results from the indentation of the first line of a paragraph,[4] on a line by itself to divide paragraphs in a highly stylized way, to divide lists, or for pure ornamentation.[5] The fleuron (as a formal glyph) is a sixteenth century introduction.[6]
Fleurons were crafted the same way as other typographic elements were: as individual metal sorts that could be fit into the printer's compositions alongside letters and numbers. This saved the printer time and effort in producing ornamentation. Because the sorts could be produced in multiples, printers could build up borders with repeating patterns of fleurons.
Fleurons in Unicode
Thirty forms of fleuron have code points in Unicode. The Dingbats and Miscellaneous Symbols blocks have three fleurons that the standard calls "floral hearts" (also called "aldus leaf", "ivy leaf", "hedera" and "vine leaf");[7] twenty-four fleurons (from the pre-Unicode Wingdings and Wingdings 2 fonts) in the Ornamental Dingbats block and three more fleurons used in archaic languages are also supported.
- U+2619 โ REVERSED ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET (Miscellaneous Symbols)
- U+2766 โฆ FLORAL HEART (Dingbats)
- U+2767 โง ROTATED FLORAL HEART BULLET (Dingbats)
- U+10877 ๐กท PALMYRENE LEFT-POINTING FLEURON
- U+10878 ๐กธ PALMYRENE RIGHT-POINTING FLEURON
- U+10AF1 ๐ซฑ MANICHAEAN PUNCTUATION FLEURON
- U+1F650 ๐ NORTH WEST POINTING LEAF (Ornamental Dingbats)
- U+1F651 ๐ SOUTH WEST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F652 ๐ NORTH EAST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F653 ๐ SOUTH EAST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F654 ๐ TURNED NORTH WEST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F655 ๐ TURNED SOUTH WEST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F656 ๐ TURNED NORTH EAST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F657 ๐ TURNED SOUTH EAST POINTING LEAF
- U+1F658 ๐ NORTH WEST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F659 ๐ SOUTH WEST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65A ๐ NORTH EAST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65B ๐ SOUTH EAST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65C ๐ HEAVY NORTH WEST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65D ๐ HEAVY SOUTH WEST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65E ๐ HEAVY NORTH EAST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F65F ๐ HEAVY SOUTH EAST POINTING VINE LEAF
- U+1F660 ๐ NORTH WEST POINTING BUD
- U+1F661 ๐ก SOUTH WEST POINTING BUD
- U+1F662 ๐ข NORTH EAST POINTING BUD
- U+1F663 ๐ฃ SOUTH EAST POINTING BUD
- U+1F664 ๐ค HEAVY NORTH WEST POINTING BUD
- U+1F665 ๐ฅ HEAVY SOUTH WEST POINTING BUD
- U+1F666 ๐ฆ HEAVY NORTH EAST POINTING BUD
- U+1F667 ๐ง HEAVY SOUTH EAST POINTING BUD
Unicode also considers the following seven glyphs as fleurons:[7]
- U+273E โพ SIX PETALLED BLACK AND WHITE FLORETTE (Dingbats)
- U+273F โฟ BLACK FLORETTE (Dingbats)
- U+2740 โ WHITE FLORETTE (Dingbats)
- U+1F3F5 ๐ต ROSETTE (Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs)
- U+1F4AE ๐ฎ WHITE FLOWER (Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs)
- U+2741 โ EIGHT PETALLED OUTLINED BLACK FLORETTE (Dingbats)
- U+1F3F6 ๐ถ BLACK ROSETTE (Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs)
Gallery
- John Wycliffe's handwritten Bible, late 14th century
- Fleuron by Robert Granjon, who pioneered the style, printed 1567
- The arabesque title page of a 1611 book.
- Detail of a printed arabesque border in a 1616 book.
- Specimens of printed floral borders from an 1897 type foundry specimen book.
- Ornamented borders by Thomas Maitland Cleland, 1923.
- Example fleuron glyphs from a digital font.
See also
- Asterism (typography) โ Typographic symbol (โ)
- Dingbat โ Typographic symbol class, a printers' ornament
- Dinkus โ Typographic symbol ( * * * ), mostly used as a sub-chapter section break. Although a group of asterisks is the most common style, fleurons are also seen fulfilling this role.
- The Fleuron, a British typography magazine from the early 20th century.
References
External links
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