Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Vexilolligy - The Various Flags of Stolzonia

Scan of the Hand-Drawn
Double Headed Eagle
This last week I spent primarily working on the design of the Imperial Flag of Stolzonia. After nearly giving up, an idea came to mind of how to properly design the Double Headed Eagle within Illustrator. I started with hand drawing the Eagle, and then scanning it onto the computer to trace it in illustrator, simply using the pencil tool so it would have a more 'natural' look to it, rather than being perfectly round and artificial looking. I eventually ended up completely re-designing the eagle in the centre of the flag, giving it a look heavily inspired by the double headed eagle of the Holy Roman Empire.  I was highly satisfied with the end result, and also learned a few new tricks about Illustrator along the way as well.



Original Pixel Flag of the Empire of Stolzonia

Holy Roman Empire Eagle

New Version of the Imperial Stolzonian Flag
PNG created from Vector export in Illustrator
I also decided to re-create the flag of the Church of Stolzonia, which has a rather simple design, but wanted to make it into a Vector version as well. I also created several alternate colored versions of the Stolzonian Flag that represent the Five Branches of the Stolzonian Military (Army, Navy, Air Force, Homeland Defense, Logistics).

Civil Flag of Stolzonia
Flag of the Church of Stolzonia
Flag of the Imperial Army
Flag of the Imperial Navy
Flag of the Imperial Air Force
Flag of the Imperial Homeland Defense
Flag of Imperial Logistics

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Vexillology - Research

I took this last week to do more in-depth research into flags, and what makes a "good" flag. Of all the nations in the world, there are only two instances in which multiple countries have identical flags, meaning that there are, in modern day, over 200 unique flags to represent the independent nations of the world. Add to that the number of flags that exist for sub-divisions, states, provinces, cities, counties, and the number skyrockets. However, when you go into these sub-divisions of nations the likelihood for a set of identical or very similar flags increases. Look at the US State Flags for instance:
Source: Wikipedia
Over half of these flags are simply a single colour background with the specific State's Seal on it, and maybe the name of the state under it, and most of those are also on a dark blue background as well, making the similarity even more. Many of these flags you probably cannot differentiate from the others without looking closely at them - to read the name off of the flag.

So, what makes a good flag then? Well its rather simple really. The best flags are unique, and also very easy to identify from a distance. A flag should pop out, you should be able to look at a flag and say "Ah yes, that is [country]," without having to sit and think if it is another country. Unfortunately that already is a common issue on the international level as well. A good example of several nations that have very similar flags would be the countries of Central America. To be specific: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua all have very similar flags: two blue stripes and one white stripe with some symbol in the middle. Obviously, a trained eye would be able to spot out the differences easily, but from a far distance and to an untrained eye they all appear very similar. These common flags are often a result of the nations all having a common cultural group, or common origin, like those central american nations previously listed.

That's about all for today. Progress on the Imperial Stolzonian flag has been halted indefinitely, as drawing a double-headed eagle has turned out to be much more complex than I had originally thought. In the meanwhile I decided to make a "coat-of-arms" style version of the Stolzonian Flag.