Or even:

%%%%
\version "2.19.46"

lilypond = \markup\concat {
  "Lily" \hspace #-.6
  \raise #.5 \rotate #170
  \fontsize #-4 \musicglyph #"clefs.G"
  \hspace #-.5 "ond"
}

\markup { \with-color #red \bold "13. " "Music engraving by" \lilypond "
2.19.46—www.lilypond.org <http://2.19.xn--46www-5u3b.lilypond.org>" }
%%%%

2016-08-06 22:35 GMT+02:00 Pierre Perol-Schneider <
pierre.schneider.pa...@gmail.com>:

> Tests update enclosed.
>
> Cheers,
> Pierre
>
> 2016-08-06 21:06 GMT+02:00 Malte Meyn <lilyp...@maltemeyn.de>:
>
>>
>>
>> Am 06.08.2016 um 17:51 schrieb Malte Meyn:
>>
>>> - #8 of course would need a pad to recognise it as a water lily rather
>>> than a generic flower; this was just a test to demonstrate a more
>>> realistic (?) positioning of petals, not a complete logo. Maybe I’ll try
>>> to add a pad.
>>>
>>
>> Here is an attempt to use this petal positioning in a logo. I’m not 100%
>> happy about the center of the flower and I’m not sure how many petals one
>> should use … but this probably depends largely on the petal shape. I think
>> I didn’t find an optimal shape yet; maybe one also has to cheat a little
>> bit and differ 1 degree or so from the golden angle to get better results.
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> lilypond-user mailing list
>> lilypond-user@gnu.org
>> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
>>
>>
>
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