The printer's flowers (fleurons) contained in these Fontographer v3.3 files are modeled on those found in John Ryder's "A Suite of Fleurons" (Charles T. Branford, Boston, Massachusetts, 1957). Many of the flowers date from the 18th century. This typeface of fleurons contains the greater majority of those found in Ryder's book. I have generated them in sizes from 10- to 36-points. These flowers should not, with only a few exceptions, be used at more than 72-points. This new edition (v1.6, 15 July 91) contains a number of new "flowers." In "Ars Typographica" (Vol 11, no. 1) I found some flowers that were in the style of the originals in this collection (in the lowercase positions). From Bruce Rogers' "Paragraphs on Printing" I found a number of simple but extremely useful ornaments: these are, for the most part, located in the numbers and SHIFT-numbers positions. The Kingsport Press catalogue (supplement #1) also contained a number of useful flowers. Some fleurs-de-lis round-out what should be an interesting and useful collection. Two of the flowers created PostScript errors (error: limitcheck; offending command: awidthshow). These, therefore had to be simplified. I did this by splitting the characters up. The component parts of the two characters can now be found in 'D' and 'K', and 'M', 'N' and 'O'. This turns out to be a blessing in disguise: the pieces can be used as independent ornaments. Further, I have kerned these characters in such a way that they overprint, thus creating the entire fleuron. Some can be used "as-is". Others are meant to be copied and reflected in a program like Freehand or Illustrator. NB: USE REFLECTION & *NOT* ROTATION to achieve the patterns you want. Have fun. Stephen Moye (CIS 76416,1542) The Studio Dept. 158 306 Thayer St. Providence, Rhode Island