
Masques made with Seashells by Jan van Kessel the Elder (1626-79) (click for larger)
Previously pre-posted:
• Eyeway to Ell — a better paronamasia than this one…

Masques made with Seashells by Jan van Kessel the Elder (1626-79) (click for larger)
Previously pre-posted:
• Eyeway to Ell — a better paronamasia than this one…

Sunburst lichen, Xanthorina parietina,* and Sea ivory, Ramalina siliquosa
Previously pre-posted:
• Songs from the Center of the Sun — an interview with Faster Than Lichen
• The Gold and the Grey — a pre-previous pre-posting of another version of this image
*Possibly.
Papyrocentric Performativity Presents:
• God Guide – A Guide to Tolkien, David Day (Octopus 1993)
• The Catcher and the Rye – The Biology of Flowers, Eigil Holm, ill. by Thomas Bredsdorff and Peter Nielsen (Penguin Nature Guides 1979)
• Dayzed and Contused – The Greatest Footballer You Never Saw: The Robin Friday Story, Paul McGuigan and Paolo Hewitt (Mainstream 1997)
Or Read a Review at Random: RaRaR

Aztec or Jacobean lily, Sprekelia formosissima (L.) (Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras)
Papyrocentric Performativity Presents:
• Bullets and Butterflies – Mad Dog Killers: The Story of a Congo Mercenary, Ivan Smith (Helion / 30° South Publishers 2012)
• Jaundiced on George – George Orwell: English Rebel, Robert Colls (Oxford University Press 2013)
• Crabsody in View – RSPB Handbook of the Seashore, Maya Plass (Bloomsbury 2013)
Or Read a Review at Random: RaRaR

A mandarin duck, Aix galericulata, in a Russian tree (from The In-Terms-in-Ator)
Papyrocentric Performativity Presents:
• Orchid Kid – The Orchid Hunter: A Young Botanist’s Search for Happiness, Leif Bersweden (Short Books 2017)
• Deep in the Dark – The Tunnel, Eric Williams (1951)
• Faces and Facts – The Self-Portrait: A Cultural History, James Hall (Thames & Hudson 2014)
• Persian Pool – Religions of Iran: From Prehistory to the Present, Richard Foltz (Oneworld 2013)
• Hooky Here – Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division, Peter Hook (Simon & Schuster 2012)
• #MiToo – Morbidly Miriam: The Mephitic Memoirs of Miriam B. Stimbers, Dr Miriam B. Stimbers (TransVisceral Books 2018)
• Or Read a Review at Random: RaRaR
Previously pre-posted (please peruse):
• Slug is a Drug — Collins Complete Guide to British Coastal Wildlife (2012)
I’ve used butterfly-images to create fractals. Now I’ve found a butterfly-image in a fractal. The exciting story begins with a triabolo, or shape created from three isoceles right triangles:
The triabolo is a rep-tile, or shape that can be divided into smaller copies of itself:

In this case, it’s a rep-9 rep-tile, divisible into nine smaller copies of itself. And each copy can be divided in turn:
But what happens when you sub-divide, then discard copies? A fractal happens:
Fractal crosses (animated)
Fractal crosses (static)
That’s a simple example; here is a more complex one:

Fractal butterflies #1
Fractal butterflies #2
Fractal butterflies #3
Fractal butterflies #4
Fractal butterflies #5
Fractal butterflies (animated)
Some of the gaps in the fractal look like butterflies (or maybe large moths). And each butterfly is escorted by four smaller butterflies. Another fractal has gaps that look like bats escorted by smaller bats:
Fractal bats (animated)
Fractal bats (static)
Elsewhere other-posted:
• Gif Me Lepidoptera — fractals using butterflies
• Holey Trimmetry — more fractal crosses