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fleuron
‖ fleuron (flœrɔ̃) Also 4 floroun. [a. F. fleuron, OF. floron, f. fleur flower.] 1. A flower-shaped ornament, used esp. in architecture or printing, on coins, etc.c 1385 Chaucer L.G.W. Prol. 220 So were the florouns of her coroun whyte. c 1660 Bp. Cosin in C. Walker Ritual Reason Why 43 note, In som...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Fleuron
A fleuron is one of several types of flower-like ornament used in various areas of art and design, including:
Fleuron (architecture), a decorative architectural element
Fleuron (typography), a decorative typographical element such as ❦ or 🙘
Fleuron (bookbinding), an element in gold-tooled bindings
The Fleuron
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The Fleuron
A fleuron is a floral ornament used by typographers. The Fleuron was the Fleuron Society's journal of typography and it was produced in seven lavish volumes.
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fleuronée
‖ fleuronée, a. Her. [a. F. fleuronné(e, f. fleuron: see fleuron.] Ornamented with fleurons: = botoné.1614 Selden Titles Hon. 195 A Crown Fleuronee [printed Fleurnoee], only differing from what is now a Royall one, in that it was not arch't or close.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Fleuron (architecture)
A fleuron is a flower-shaped ornament, and in architecture may have a number of meanings:
It is a collective noun for the ornamental termination at the
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Fleuron (typography)
A commonly encountered fleuron is the , the floral heart or (ivy leaf). The fleuron (as a formal glyph) is a sixteenth century introduction.
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Bembo
Bembo Typogr. (ˈbɛmbəʊ) The name given to a type face cut in 1929 by the Monotype Corporation after that used by Aldus Manutius (see Aldine) in his edition of De ætna, a tract by the Italian cardinal and scholar Pietro Bembo (1470–1547).1930 Fleuron VII. 178 The consummate distribution of the shadin...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Stanley Morison
In 1922, he was a founder-member of the Fleuron Society dedicated to typographic matters (a fleuron being a typographic flower or ornament). He edited the society's journal, The Fleuron, from 1925 to 1930. The quality of the publication's artwork and printing was considered exceptional.
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Bullet (typography)
; see Fleuron (typography)
; see Fleuron (typography)
used in Japan as a bullet, and called tainome.
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Nemesia (plant)
The following cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit:-
= ‘Penblue’
‘Innocence’
= ‘Fleuron’
Nemesia denticulata
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Georges Ohnet
Countess Sarah (1882), Lise Fleuron (1884), The Ladies of Croix-Mort (1886), Will (1888), Dr. Lisa Fleuron, directed by Roberto Roberti (Italy, 1920, based on the novel Lise Fleuron).
, directed by Gero Zambuto (Italy, 1920, based on the novel La
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Keyham, Leicestershire
The tower has a fleuron frieze below its battlements.
Keyham Old Hall is one of eleven Grade II listed buildings in the village.
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Holbrook Jackson
He was in the short-lived Fleuron Society (1923) with Stanley Morison, Francis Meynell, Bernard Newdigate and Oliver Simon. Practice (Kynoch Press 1923) with Stanley Morison
Private Presses in England (1923)
William Morris (1926)
The Bibliophile's Almanack for 1927 (The Fleuron
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