Waterleaf (architecture)

In architecture, a waterleaf is a distinctive sculptural motif used on the capitals of columns and pilasters in European buildings during the late twelfth century. It is a highly simplified plant motif, characteristic of the "late Norman" style of Romanesque architecture.

A waterleaf capital is formed of broad, smooth leaf-shapes (typically four in number), unribbed except for a central fold, which curve upward and outward before curling over at the tips where they meet the abacus (the flat slab at the top of the column, normally square but sometimes octagonal). The curled tip of the waterleaf may be small and neat or large and bulbous; it usually curves inward towards the abacus, but may occasionally turn outwards (both forms can sometimes be seen in adjacent capitals of the same period, as for example at Geddington, Northamptonshire, UK.[1]).

gollark: All you need is a 1MHz single-core and 640KB of memory.
gollark: I think qualcomm makes snapdragon SBCs, actually.
gollark: They still aren't great compared to other, cooler single board computers, for much but community/hardware support.
gollark: You can get Pis as compute modules, which are probably cheaper, if harder to actually do anything with.
gollark: I mean, I don't actually have equipment doing 10gbit or enough money to get any but it seems cool nevertheless.

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