The Snark

Percontation PointAccording to Bibliophile Bullpen, this is “called a percontation point — a ‘rhetorical question mark’. . . an irony mark also called a snark or zing. Created by Henry Denham in the 1580s, it pops up in literature every century or so, but never really caught on.”
The history of the percontation point is here on wikipedia. Take a look, if just to see the side bar that lists a plethora of little used punctuation marks and their names. Can you guess these: guillemets, asterism, and solidus?
Thanks to Cathy for the tip!

Daily Drop Caps

R drop caphiannon passed along this quite festive website:
“The Daily Drop Cap is an ongoing project by typographer and illustrator Jessica Hische. Each day (or at least each WORK day), a new hand-crafted decorative initial cap will be posted for your enjoyment and for the beautification of blog posts everywhere”

Map Cuts

Cathy sent me a link to a post about Karen O’Leary’s Map Cuts. They are hand cut, and Karen says this on her Etsy shop:

If you’re interested in a certain city, please send me an email and allow a few months for me to complete it. please note, each map takes quite a bit of time. Custom pieces will be hand-cut in the order that payment is received.

Map Cuts by Karen O’Leary