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Collecting Flags


By: Jason Maxwell
Submitted: 2011-04-25 23:49:05 | Word Count: 424


Collecting flags is a past time that is fast becoming popular. It may be not as common as the usual hobbies of stamp or coin collecting but it is as enjoyable.


The science of studying flags is called vexillology. Before the Internet, It used to be a hard collection to complete. Collecting stamps is quite easy because you can find them being circulated in the postal service. The next to stamps are coins because they are also in circulation. But flags have a certain respect accorded them. They represent your country so that handling one is congruent to your reverence for your nation. That is one reason why people dont easily share their flags for a collection. But times have changed. Flags from every nation can now be bought easily on the web. So, a social studies teacher can choose to show students the original items instead of just photographs.
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Flags come in many sizes, and there is a proper term for each size. Let us look into the terms in use concerning flags.


A flagpole or flagstaff is the pole that holds a flag which is more preferable. The side or edge of the flag adjacent to the flagstaff is the hoist. It is also the term used for the vertical width of the flag. The side or edge opposite the hoist is the fly. This term is sometimes used to mean the length of the flag horizontally. The field is the color of the background used on the flag. Any of the symbols, designs, figures, or emblems that are used on the flag is the charge. Fimbriation refers to a border or edging that separates two unlike colors. The badge denotes a coat of arms, shield, or heraldic symbol placed on the flag.


Canton refers to one fourth of the flag but usually it is the upper hoist area to the left. An example of a canton is the field of stars on the US flag. A saltire is the cross that spans to all sides of the flag. The flag of Scotland is a good model for a saltire which represents the cross of St. Andrew. Pennants and banners are differentiated from a flag by the way they are displayed which is draping downward. You can even see from the way the badges and charges are laid out, they are designed with the longer sides vertical to the ground.

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