48: Ball-flower with four undercut petals
Hereford Cathedral
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Ball flowers on Hereford Cathedral tower.

The ball-flower is a decorative detail in stone masonry that came to Britain with the Normans. Ball-flowers are unique; no two are identical. They were carved largely freehand, often quite crudely, and so are as individual as the mason's own handwriting. Though based on a standard pattern of three petals surrounding a central ball, some rogue four-petalled examples occur. Hereford Cathedral is famous for its tower decorated with thousands of carved stone ball-flowers, having probably the largest number of them to be found on one building anywhere in the world. This reproduction is actual size. (See also No.s 45 and 46).

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