The lichen forms a thin, grey to white-grey crust (
thallus) with a distinct surface skin (). Scattered across it are short, straight to only sparsely branched lirellae, which are narrow, black, slit-like fruiting bodies 1–5 mm long and about 0.3–0.4 mm wide. Their "lips" () are mostly smooth but can become faintly grooved () in older parts. A diagnostic feature is the conspicuous yellow to yellow-orange powder () that dusts the sides of the lirellae; this pigment is an
anthraquinone compound. The wall of each fruiting body () is completely (black and charcoal-like), and the spore-bearing layer (
hymenium) is clear, i.e., without dispersed granules.
Ascospores are produced eight per sac (
ascus), colourless, and relatively long (80–120 × 9–12
μm). They are described as "terminally " (with 15–19 transverse
septa and 1–2 longitudinal septa limited to the end cells), and bear gelatinous caps at both ends that are rounded proximally and fin-like distally. A
spot test with potassium hydroxide solution (K) on the lirellae turns the anthraquinone pigment yellow and then violet to purple, a useful chemical check in the field and under the microscope.
Similar species Allographa jayatilakana differs from
A. flavominiata in having much shorter ascospores, from
A. firferi in having terminally muriform spores (
firferi is only transversely septate), and from
A. ochracea in its yellow (not orange)
anthraquinone that is K+ (yellow → slowly purple–violet). ==Habitat and distribution==