The Black Florette is a single-stroke divider in the Decorative Frames family. Solid stylised flower. Centrepiece for floral dividers like ─✿─.
Click Copy ✿ above to copy the divider to your clipboard, then paste it into your Instagram or TikTok bio, Discord channel, Notion page, Tumblr post, Markdown <hr> fallback, or wherever you need a clean text break. Geometric shapes and ornamental punctuation used as section markers and frame ornaments.
Using Black Florette in your bio, posts and docs
Instagram & TikTok bios
Drop Black Florette between sections of your bio to separate name, role, location, and links. Most single-stroke dividers render consistently across iOS and Android in the bio context.
Discord & Slack channels
Pin a divider message between sections of a channel topic or use it inside long messages to break up regions. Discord renders Unicode dividers in monospace inside code blocks (``` ``` wraps) for pixel-perfect alignment.
Notion, Obsidian, and Markdown
When the standard ---hr looks too plain, paste this divider as a regular paragraph for a more typographic break. Use sparingly — they don't collapse like real horizontal rules.
More Decorative Frames
Frequently asked questions
What is the Black Florette divider?
Black Florette is a single-stroke text divider in the Decorative Frames family. Solid stylised flower. Centrepiece for floral dividers like ─✿─.
Will Black Florette render correctly on every platform?
Black Florette is built from Unicode characters supported across iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux, and all modern browsers. Some older fonts or apps without full Unicode support may fall back to placeholder boxes (□) for less common glyphs. In monospaced contexts (terminal, code blocks) the alignment will be pixel-perfect.
Can I use Black Florette in an Instagram bio?
Yes — paste it as a regular line in your bio. Instagram allows up to 150 characters in the bio, so check the length first (this divider is 1 chars). Pair it with line breaks for a clean multi-section bio.
How is this different from the standard <hr> rule?
An HTML <hr> is a semantic horizontal rule rendered by the browser at a fixed thickness and width. Black Florette is plain text — you control its width by how many characters you paste, and it works inside any text field (bios, captions, messages, plain emails) where HTML doesn't.