* Bill Gosper <billgosper@gmail.com> [Sep 22. 2014 15:55]: jj>Extra points if you do that gif-ery for the curve http://jjj.de/tmp-ryde/t-shirt-R13-15-hires-cropped.png (L-system at bottom, turns are by 120 degrees). Total curve should be light gray, and the moving part should be 1/13 of the total (so the same shape will appear 13 times, as indicated in the image). ... plus you get a T-shirt! (If you use the image to, well, print one. I got one and it looks quite OK). Best, jj That highly symmetric (almost dihedral 6) supersnowflake from three of these in a loop--is that also rep13? Yours? I assume you mean page 10 of http://jjj.de/tmp-rwg/all-r13-tiles.pdf Here is generation 4 of the same: http://jjj.de/tmp-rwg/r13-15-plus-tile-4.pdf It has rotational 6-symmetry, which (apparently) can only happen for orders of the form 6*k+1. No flip-symmetry (so indeed not D_6 as you mention), and I am fairly sure none of my curves has D_6. Mine? I'd think so. Note I'll be leaving tomorrow morning (that's in 24 hours from now) for http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/OEIS/announcement.html and will be away from my mail until 12.10. Best, jj That's a beautiful clump of three rep-13s. But it's not obviously a clump of 13 stars. Julian sent a possible recipe that might not be tested before you leave. If it works, Betsy Ross can thank her lucky stars no Revolutionary thought of it in her time. Julian also sent an amazing codeberg that threatens to collect your t-shirt, if the offer survives dimacs. --rwg