History of medial decoration?

I'm curious about the appearance of bumps or other decorations halfway up the stems of type. David Shields calls them medial or midstem decorations and notes them in the context of wood types in the Tuscan style. They are exploited in a good number of chromatic wood types. Other features of Tuscan style like bifurcated serifs can be traced many centuries back in writing, but I wonder what precedents there are (in writing, type, or other lettering) for the medial decorations. 
Here's a Figgins specimen from the 1st half of the 19c showing medial ornament independent of "Tuscan" style:
Are there earlier types like this? Do earlier "writing masters" show experiments like this? 
(My point of departure are embroidered letters, so I do know about those, which easily predate wood type and Figgins.)

Comments

  • Craig Eliason
    Craig Eliason Posts: 1,473
    Oh yeah! Thank you!
  • Kent Lew
    Kent Lew Posts: 1,008
    I believe J.F. & Matthias Rosart were cutting similarly ornamented types around the same time period, 1760s. I can try to find examples to snapshot later.
  • John Hudson
    John Hudson Posts: 3,474
    Rosart was my first thought too, but there are only more fully floriated examples in the small specimen. Maybe there is something closer to this style in the Harry Carter’s Enschedé book?
  • @Miles Newlyn Is it possible that it is also connected to the Lombard capitals "with pearls"?
  • Miles Newlyn
    Miles Newlyn Posts: 265
    @michele casanova I think you're right.
  • John Hudson
    John Hudson Posts: 3,474
    The last of Kent’s examples occurs in the 1768 Rosart specimen too, but I had perhaps unfairly discounted it from this discussion since there is so much more going on in the design than just the medial ornament. Rosart’s ornamented types are labeled in the specimen ‘fleuragé’, which I think is a lovely term.