flagdesign.nz

Documenting the redesign of the New Zealand flag
Who designed the current New Zealand flag? It appears the answer to this question is not widely known, but with a quick Google search and the wonderful Wikipedia you can find the answer…
Albert Hastings Markham.
Born in France, a Knight Commander in...

Who designed the current New Zealand flag?

It appears the answer to this question is not widely known, but with a quick Google search and the wonderful Wikipedia you can find the answer…

Albert Hastings Markham.

Born in France, a Knight Commander in the Order of Bath, a member of the Royal Navy, and explorer, Markham created the current New Zealand flag.

In 1869 he submitted a design to George Bowen, the Governor of New Zealand for a national ensign for the fledgeling nation. His proposal, incorporating the Southern Cross, was approved and remains in use to this day.

So that’s the “designer” of our current flag. Somewhat timely, as the submissions come to a close, that we consider the history and origins of the current design.

There’s lots of interesting information about the New Zealand flag, not just about who designed it. The Ministry for Culture & Heritage has several pages on their website dedicated to the flag, the dimensions, how to display the flag, when to fly it at half-mast and commonly asked questions.

The original description of the New Zealand flag was first published in 1902 in the New Zealand Gazette:

The centres of the stars forming the long limb of the cross shall be on a vertical line on the fly, midway between the Union Jack and the outer edge of the fly, and equidistant from its upper and lower edges; and the distance apart of the centres of the stars shall be equal to thirty-six sixtieths the hoist of the ensign.

The centres of the stars forming the short limb of the cross shall be on a line intersecting the vertical limb at an angle of 82 therewith, and rising from near the lower fly corner of the Union Jack towards the upper fly corner of the ensign, its point of intersection with the vertical line being distant from the centre of the uppermost star of the cross twelve-sixtieths of the hoist of the ensign.

The distance of the centre of the star nearest the outer edge of the fly from the point of intersection shall be equal to twelve-sixtieths of the hoist of the ensign, and the distance of the centre of the star nearest the Union Jack from the point of intersection shall be equal to fourteen-sixtieths of the hoist of the ensign.

The star nearest the fly edge of the ensign shall measure five-sixtieths, the star at the top of the cross and that nearest to the Union Jack shall each measure six-sixtieths, and the star at the bottom of the cross shall measure seven-sixtieths of the hoist of the ensign across their respective red points, and the width of the white borders to the several stars shall in all cases be equal to one one-hundred-and-twentieth of the hoist of the ensign.

I find it quite amazing how descriptive the New Zealand Gazette were in describing what is ultimately a rather simple flag.

Another fascinating find was the information on how to fly our current flag. There’s detailed rules for displaying the flag outlining how to fly it “from a flagpole with yardarm and gaff”, how it should be held in “processions” and positioned “on a speaker’s platform”.

The flag.govt.nz site also has a great video about the History of the New Zealand flag. Here’s part of the video transcript:

So he tasked Lieutenant Albert Hastings Markham to come up with a design.

Markham was based in Australia on the HMS Blanche where some flags were already using the Southern Cross.

Nobody knows for sure, but it’s been suggested Markham could have seen such a design, which may be why our flag is similar to Australia’s.

Many other flags of Commonwealth countries have also displayed the Union Jack. Over time, some countries have changed their flag’s design, but have remained part of the Commonwealth.

Then in 1898, our ships were instructed to carry the colony badge in a white disc by the British Board of Trade. By 1900, national pride was at an all time high with the Boer War.

We wanted a flag to call our own, but which one? So in 1902 Premier Richard John Seddon introduced the New Zealand Ensign Bill, which parliament passed and the flag we have today became official.

Wherever New Zealand is represented, both at home and on the world stage, you’ll see the New Zealand Blue Ensign.

The design by Markham was in fact the third New Zealand flag. The first was the United Tribes flag, and the second the Union Jack flag.

You can find out a lot more information about the flags of New Zealand on the nzhistory.net.nz site.

Fijian Flag Design Process

With the launch this week of the newfijiflag.com site, I thought it timely to review the process underway in Fiji to change their flag. If you’re unfamiliar with their current design, Wikipedia has an overview about the “Flag of Fiji”.

Alongside the activity occurring in New Zealand, Fiji are racing ahead and are on track to change the design later this year. There’s been lots of great coverage with Radio New Zealand documenting the process and the Fiji Sun providing a local view on proceedings. Most recently the focus in the media has been on the short-listed designs.

Submissions & Short-listed Designs

So far 47 entries have been short-listed and then a further 23 presented to the public for consideration. The newfijiflag.com site features these 23 designs after more than 2000 were submitted. The flags are presented with an overview of the symbolism identified within the designs. Below is a portion covering the use of colour:

  • “Fiji Blue” provides continuity from the 1970–2015 flag, remaining the “banner blue” of the national anthem. It represents peace, serenity, and freedom, as well as the Pacific Ocean. It shows solidarity with all island nations.
  • Yellow represents radiance, life, sustenance, and a new beginning. It recalls the sun and Fiji’s place as “the land of the first rising sun” and its tropical location.
  • Dark Blue stands for peace, prosperity, trust, dignity, and intelligence. The colour of the deep ocean, it represents the depth of Fiji’s culture.
  • Red represents passion, strength and energy of the Fijian people.

Each flag is presented above a form where you can respond (regardless of whether you are a Fijian citizen) by selecting that you strongly agree through to ‘strongly disagreeing’ with the design / symbolism as well as providing any additional comments.

The 23 designs are variations on particular themes using a similar aesthetic and colour palette. Whilst in most cases the ideas and symbolism seem sound, there’s some overly detailed flags and interesting arrangements that don’t appear that conducive to being replicated at small sizes. I don’t want to appear overly critical, however many of the final 23 are not well drawn. The two designs that stood out were Number 47 and Number 49. NB: Weirdly those numbers do not match the URLS.

UPDATE 1: Since writing this Radio New Zealand reported that a committee member overseeing the Fijian flag redesign has anonymously confirmed the 23 designs were “amalgamated”:

The National Flag Committee member says the group reports directly to the Attorney General, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum, and was told to go back to choose more after it selected five final designs.

This isn’t unique to Fiji, with a similar approach taken with the South African Flag. A public competition failed to find an appropriate solution, then several design studios were asked to consider submissions and present alternatives, also failing, before Frederick Brownell designed the flag we recognise today. As a reminder the process in New Zealand allows for this as my article about the terms and conditions outlined.

The inability to decide from public submissions does have an impact on the perception of the process and members of the public in Fiji had evidently been raising their concerns:

Given the designs that have popped up thus far, a lot of people have shared their opinions that they don’t think that they were part of the process in designing the new flag. After 1000-plus entries that went in it seems like the committee decided to come up with their own design.

http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/275868/fiji’s-flag-council-confirms-designs-are-amalgamated

Earlier in the process the Fiji Sun published details about how the submissions would be accepted by mail, online (email) and in person over the course of several months. Interestingly they also stressed “you do not need to be a professional designer to make a submission”:

You do not need a computer design program and you do not need to be a professional designer to make a submission. Sketches and drawings will be considered the same as electronic designs. All you need is pen, pencil and paper to participate.

http://fijisun.com.fj/2015/03/05/how-to-submit-designs-for-fijis-national-flag-competition/

UPDATE 2: Radio New Zealand have reported that the final 23 designs are now no longer being considered as “locked in stone” or “final” after a public backlash.

Announcement & Background

Following the initial announcement the media coverage about the change in Fiji was a mixture of concern and opposition with the “Fiji flag process slammed as ‘nonsense’” and “Opponents of Fiji’s future flag ‘ready for jail’” a sample of the articles online.

Radio New Zealand documented the “Concerns in Fiji over process for new flag” (Audio), highlighting the lack of a “mandate to change the flag without a referendum” and that the Prime Minister has stated he wants to retain the colour blue as part of the redesign:

As Prime Minister, I have an open mind about the final outcome. My preference at this stage is to retain the existing “Fiji blue” background – but without the Union Flag and Shield. But I’m excited to see whatever ideas the Fijian people come up with.

http://fijisun.com.fj/2015/02/03/pm-officially-announces-fiji-flag-will-be-changed/

Initially the Fijian public weren’t involved in the decision to change the current flag, only to be later told a referendum would be required to make changes to the flag in the future. Radio New Zealand reported on this in the article: “Fiji’s new flag laws seen as ‘ironic’”. This means the current change will be confirmed and approved by the Prime Minister, whilst any future changes will require a referendum. A petition gathered 3000 signatures requesting the current change was only approved through a referendum, however it was ignored.

To make matters worse, the current flag designer Tessa Mackenzie has spoken out explaining her disappointment with plans to replace the design.

The process underway in Fiji and New Zealand has often been viewed as a distraction from other important issues both countries face. With increasing water and electricity cuts and a reported 45% of the Fijian population living below the poverty line, there’s clearly work to be done that won’t be solved by a new flag.

Unlike New Zealand, Fiji and their fearless leader Frank Bainimarama plan on changing the flag to coincide with a significant event, the “45th anniversary of Fiji’s independence”. The Guardian provides plenty of background in their opinion piece: “Postcolonial? Yes. But Fiji’s new flag will also be a break with the chiefs’ power”.

Bainimarama has framed the flag change as an effort to break free of the shackles of Fiji’s colonial past. The flag that has existed since 1970 features the Union Jack – a nod to the British monarchy’s role in governing the islands from 1874 to 1970.

The Fiji Sun added further details saying “The final design should represent the theme: Fiji forward, Fiji as one people.”. Whilst the NPR also reported on the process and goals behind the change in flag stating:

The move is intended as unifying. The country has two major groups: ethnic Fijians and ethnic Indians, who were brought over by the British as laborers to work on Fiji’s sugar plantations in the 19th century. Relations between the two communities have sometimes been tense.

http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/03/02/390164844/fiji-launches-competition-for-new-national-flag

Finally, the process in Fiji has been a fascinating precursor to what might happen in New Zealand. The issues with “amalgamation” and public involvement have been interesting to document. We’re ultimately much more fortunate in New Zealand that the process is democratic, although as the coverage surrounding both processes outlines, change is difficult and polarising.

The renowned vexillologist Ted Kaye, author of “Good Flag, Bad Flag” and part of the flag committee in Fiji was interviewed by Vice Magazine about the process:

It’s a common refrain heard when a flag change is proposed: that people like the old flag, not necessarily because of the inherent characteristic of that old flag, but because that’s the flag they’re familiar with and that’s the flag that’s represented them.

http://www.vice.com/en_au/read/a-flag-expert-on-how-to-design-a-nations-flag-491

Overcoming that relationship with the familiar has been difficult in Fiji and no doubt will continue to be in New Zealand as well.

Media Coverage

Like the local and international coverage New Zealand received, many media companies have reported on the process in the Pacific. For posterity here’s a selection of articles covering the Fijian flag redesign:

ABC News: Fiji flag designer Tessa Mackenzie disappointed by Frank Bainimarama’s plan to replace it

NPR: Fiji Launches Contest To Design New National Flag

The Guardian: “Postcolonial? Yes. But Fiji’s new flag will also be a break with the chiefs’ power”

Radio New Zealand: “Fiji flag process slammed as ‘nonsense’”

Radio New Zealand: Concerns in Fiji over process for new flag (Audio)

Radio New Zealand: Opponents of Fiji’s future flag ‘ready for jail’

Newsmax: Union Jack No Longer Belongs on Flag; Country Will Redesign It

Fiji Sun: PM Officially Announces Changes To Fiji Flag

Fiji Sun: New Flag For Top Forum?

The Telegraph: Fiji to remove Union Jack from flag, PM says

Portland Flag Association: A New Flag for Fiji—A Work in Progress

Vice: Here’s How to Design a Country’s Flag

“Run It Up The Flagpole…”

Over the last few weeks The New Zealand Herald has published several articles relating to the flag process. One included a poll with a list of 15 flags to choose from.

Only 1800 people responded to the poll with The Herald deciding the results suggested ”Traditional flag designs prove to be most popular”. Nearly all of the options are “traditional” with 10 of the 15 designs including the Southern Cross, 7 of the 10 including either a fern or koru, and 2 of the 10 including a kiwi. All of these are established and recognisable symbols of New Zealand.

Unfortunately nothing unique was presented as part of the poll. This is a worrying sign that interesting alternatives are not getting exposure alongside the obvious submissions.

The Results:

  1. Heritage Minimalist 4.4%
  2. New New Zealand Flag 3.97%
  3. Long White Cloud 6.06%
  4. Three Islands. One Land 1.13%
  5. Silver Fern Flag Kyle Lockwood’s original 23.06%
  6. Kiwi: Air Force 1.4%
  7. Design 1 0.38%
  8. Matariki Long White Cloud 3.81%
  9. Manawa 9.12%
  10. Silver Fern 10.57%
  11. Silver Fern with Southern Cross 25.15%
  12. United New Zealand 6.49%
  13. Kiwi, Aotearoa, Oceans East & West 0.54%
  14. Contemporary 0.65%
  15. Long White Cloud Southern Cross 3.33%

The Herald also discusses the lack of engagement and low turnout at roadshows around the country. Countering that, the article “New flag debate firing up online” highlights some of the visiter numbers from the flag sites:

There had been almost 350,000 visits to the flag.govt.nz website where the designs are on show and 123,000 to the standfor.co.nz website. More than 2000 people had visited information stands. There had also been more than 202,000 visits to the Facebook page in the last week.

UPDATE 1: I suggested on Twitter that more of the analytics be made available and have submitted a request to the flag.govt.nz site team to see what information can be published.

UPDATE 2: The flag.govt.nz site team politely declined my request for information. They have valid security / privacy concerns about sharing particular details so will publish what data they can soon. I look forward to seeing what they are able to share.

Terms & Conditions

With the launch of the submission process, the flag.govt.nz site was updated with the official terms and conditions for submitting a flag design for consideration.

The terms and conditions start off well with clear and concise language outlining the submission process with obvious points such as:

You confirm that each Flag Design you suggest, including each element of each Flag Design, is:

a. an original work made by you and no one else, except to the extent you disclose otherwise under clause 12;
b. not copied; and
c. not illegal, offensive or derogatory.

So far, so good. Next up, the terms surrounding the consideration of the designs by the panel. In this section they allow for any design to be considered, so it is not necessarily a requirement that the design be submitted as part of the official process:

The Panel and the Crown each reserve the right to consider other flag designs suggested before, during or after the Suggestion Period.

As I quoted in the post about the “Terms Of Reference”, there is room for a design company to be engaged outside of the open submissions process. It will be interesting to see if this happens, and if so, in what capacity the design industry is involved.

The next section outlines what happens if you’re fortunate enough to have your flag shortlisted. It turns out you might have the GCSB investigating you. As the terms and conditions delicately put it, you’ll be required to “submit to checks”, of which they provide a couple of examples:

If your Flag Design is selected as one of a shortlist of preferred designs to be subjected to a due diligence process (Shortlisted Designs) by the Panel, you and any other author of your Flag Design acknowledge that you may be required to submit to checks, for example intellectual property checks and a criminal conviction check. Any information obtained during or as a result of these checks may be taken into account by the Panel and may exclude your Flag Design from further consideration.

This makes sense and allows the Government to avoid any X Factor or Bachelorette type of embarrassment by not properly vetting those who have submissions shortlisted.

The next section of the terms and conditions outlines that you’ll “grant the Crown an irrevocable, royalty-free, worldwide, perpetual, sub-licensable licence to use, copy, modify, adapt and/or publish your Flag Design for any purposes the Crown sees fit in relation to the selection of a new flag for New Zealand.” Goodbye rights. This means they’ll have the ability to:

Alter or amend your Flag Design, merge or combine your Flag Design with any other flag design or use elements of your Flag Design in another flag design.

Hard not to worry about that clause. If you submit a design and it gets shortlisted you could end up seeing it ‘merged’ with another submission. Maybe you forgot to add the Southern Cross, well the Government could fix that for you an create a Silver Fern / Southern Cross hybrid, presenting our two must commonly submitted symbols, regardless of their suitability. I joke… Although this could be used to alter a design, it might only be required to simply perfect a submission for production and manufacturing.

Alongside merging or combining your design you also grant the Government the ability to publish your design in any medium throughout the process. This also covers any future use after the referendums. Basically, if your flag makes the cut, you’ll have no say in how it is presented or used.

The following section on intellectual property and moral rights is interesting as it explains what you’ve waiving:

While the Crown will acknowledge authors as described in clause 13, by suggesting a Flag Design you hereby waive all of your moral rights arising from your Flag Design throughout the world, to the extent that you may lawfully do so, and you agree not to assert any of your moral rights, and to provide all consents required by the Crown, in relation to the use and publication of your Flag Design…

The section continues by outlining where and how your submission can be used. It’s no surprise the Government is making it very clear that you will have no legal ownership of your design, as well as many other clauses that protect their interests. Considering the circumstances, any open submission process requires all-encompassing terms and conditions, and that’s what these set out.

One of better clauses in the terms and conditions is the re-assignment of rights that you can request if your design is not selected:

If your Flag Design is chosen as a Shortlisted Design but is not ultimately chosen to be the next New Zealand flag, then you may request that the Crown re-assigns the rights transferred under clause 15 so that you regain ownership of all rights you had before you suggested your Flag Design.

Finally, if things go pear-shaped the crown reserves the right to cancel the process. Always a good idea to have a get out of jail card…

The Crown reserves the right to vary or cancel the Flag Consideration Project at any time.

https://www.govt.nz/browse/engaging-with-government/the-nz-flag-your-chance-to-decide/terms-and-conditions/

Terms Of Reference

Over the last few weeks several questions have been floated about how the Flag Consideration Panel will be reviewing the designs and what their responsibilities will be.

When submissions have been excluded from the gallery on the flag.govt.nz site, email responses refer to the “terms of reference” the panel will be using. From what I can tell the “terms of reference” they are referring to are the “guiding principles” in the original cabinet paper appendix. I’ve previously posted a summary of the Guiding Principles, but thought it timely to provide a bit more detail.

Interestingly there is a section about the approach the panel can take.

The research may include the following approaches (within the available budget):

  1. surveying;
  2. commissioning a design agency to create a range of potential designs, and promulgating these for public feedback; and
  3. commissioning legal assistance to complete domestic and international due diligence on the suitability and availability of proposed designs.

I don’t recall seeing the note about “commissioning a design agency” the first time I reviewed the cabinet papers. This is rather fascinating and I’d love to hear if a design company has been approached. Let me know if you have…

Also in the appendix is a section outlining the responsibilities of the panel and the requirements for their report.

The FCP’s report is expected to include the following:

  1. a summary of the processes used to engage with the public;
  2. any common themes in designs and suggestions from the public;
  3. any common design elements in flag designs submitted by the public;
  4. discussion of the process by which the group has narrowed down the selection of alternative designs;
  5. description of the work the FCP has undertaken to ensure the alternative designs meet accepted design standards and that there are no legal or other impediments to their use;
  6. recommendations for a reasonable number (5-6) of alternative designs for inclusion in a referendum, together with the current New Zealand Flag.

I can’t wait to see that report and what they determine are “common themes” and what submissions will “meet accepted design standards”.

http://www.dpmc.govt.nz/sites/all/files/publications/nzflag-process-cabinet-paper-october2014.pdf

Local Media Coverage

Since late 2014 there’s been a lot of local media coverage surrounding the proposed redesign of the New Zealand flag. So far it’s falling into four distinct types of stories:

  1. Polls: Polling results and the number of New Zealanders for or against the change.
  2. Money: Coverage of the cost and information surrounding the process / referendums.
  3. Submissions: Design critiques and flag reviews.
  4. Opinions: General coverage and opinions.

I’ll summarise a few articles and reflect on the impact the media is having throughout the process thus far.

Polls

Several media companies in New Zealand have been busy polling and have produced numerous headlines documenting how many people are against the flag change. TVNZ published these articles: “Three quarters of Kiwis against changing flag” and “Two-thirds against changing flag” in 2014 and most recently The New Zealand Herald published; “Flag poll message clear: Leave it alone”.

There’s clearly a lot of mileage in posting poll results and thus gaining page views (more advertising revenue) due to incensed New Zealanders clicking and commenting on these articles. These comments deserve an entire post documenting the wide range of opinions…

The last article by The Herald suggests from “750 eligible voters” only 25% of New Zealanders said yes and 75% said no to changing our flag. When asked about an alternative flag the results suggest a silver fern would be preferred:

The last article by The Herald suggests that of “750 eligible voters” only 25% said yes to changing the flag, compared to 75% that said no. When asked about an alternative flag the results suggest a silver fern would be preferred:

The silver fern was the front runner for an alternative flag in the Herald poll, preferred by 45 per cent. In second place was the Southern Cross with 18 per cent support.

The timing of the poll, and much of the media coverage surrounding it, aligned with the centennial ANZAC commemorations, as well as interviews with members of the RSA presenting their reasons for not wanting to change the flag.

Polls about changing our flag go way back and you can see a good overview on the New Zealand Flag Debate page on Wikipedia. In 2013 and 2014 polling saw the highest results voting for change. The Listener ran a poll on their site in March 2014 asking “Do you think the NZ flag design should be changed?” The poll was part of an article by Sally Blundell called, “A symbol solution” with live results suggesting 62% of people said “Yes, it’s time for a completely new look.” Information about how many people responded to the poll is unfortunately unavailable.

Despite that recent result from The Listener, you can easily make an informed guess that at this time the sentiment is very much “leave it alone”. What is unclear from all of the current polling is the makeup of the poll respondents. Would the results be different if it were just people under 30 responding? If we split the results by residents and citizens would there be a difference? Does a particular ethnicity in New Zealand want a new flag more than another?

Asking these additional questions (or having access to that data) would help to better determine who is represented in these polls and whether all of New Zealanders views are proportionally reflected in the results.

Money

It’s no surprise some of the first media coverage surrounding the process was dedicated to the cost of the referendums and the $640 per day payment the Flag Consideration Panel would be receiving.

That pales in comparison to the $25.7 million1 estimated cost associated with the entire process. It’s hard to find an accurate break-down about how this cost will be allocated, although The New Zealand Herald article, ”Taxpayers’ $25m bill, even if flag stays”, does provide some detail:

The publicity blitz around selecting the new designs, which begins on Anzac Day next year, will cost $6.7 million, while the two referendums will cost $17.3 million. Other costs will take the overall bill to $25.7 million whether the flag is changed or not.

The cost of replacing existing flags, uniforms and government references to the existing New Zealand flag is estimated to be at least $2.69 million2. For context (and this is not a criticism), that’s slightly less than making cycle trails in Northland.

TVNZ have several articles online about how the flag change is a “gross waste of money” and that it is “absolutely ridiculous”. This tone is representative of most of the coverage surrounding the cost of the flag process.

Responding to the debate about the cost, it has been interesting to see Sam Morgan tweeting his opinions:

Worried about spending $22m to change the flag? It is surely preferable to spending $22m and not changing the flag. #nzflag

— Sam Morgan (@samfromwgtn) May 12, 2015

Although he quotes a different amount (it is likely to be $25.7 million), it is worrying thought that spending this amount of money may indeed not see a change in flag. That shouldn’t be the reason for changing, however it a compelling one.

Morgan also puts the estimated cost into perspective with some rough sums on how the amount is only a fraction of what is spent in the New Zealand budget:

According to my calculations, the flag budget (~$22m) is about 9 hrs of our social security budget. #nzflag

— Sam Morgan (@samfromwgtn) May 20, 2015

Submissions

The New Zealand Herald ‘helpfully’ point out the flag will need to have “wow factor”. Surprisingly the first comment in response to the article nails it:

This is our national flag not some cheap advertising campaign, it needs dignity not wow factor. We look ridiculous enough on the world stage as it is.

I’ve yet to see a well articulated article from the major New Zealand news publications about design and the importance of it in the process. Let me know if I’ve missed something…

Many of the submissions need to be seriously critiqued, others easily disregarded. At this point none of the major media companies are reviewing specific concepts (other than the obvious parodies and child-like designs).

To be fair, The Listener and Radio New Zealand have stood out with more in-depth reporting on the process, but are yet to throughly review and critique the submissions. At the point of writing there are over 2000+ entries in the submission gallery which does make that hard work!

The majority of the local media coverage about the submissions has been similar to that of the international coverage with lists of flags, often those poorly designed.

You can see some of the local articles summarising submissions below:

TVNZ: One flag to rule them all: But which flag?

NZ Herald: Flag will change … but to this?

NZ Herald: Kiwis reveal their flag desires

Radio New Zealand: Best of flags, worst of flags

Radio Live: 20 Best and worst designs for new NZ flag

Opinions

One area of the media I’ve not touched on is Stuff Nation, a reader submitted “news” and community section of the stuff.co.nz site.

There have already been several posts about individual submissions and opinions on these designs. I’ll be reviewing designs separately, but most interesting is the platform this is providing for designs and entrepreneurial kiwis trying to promote their ideas.

One example of self-promotion is a post by Zolan Davis who writes about “Reimagining the New Zealand flag”. The post features two designs that have been submitted for consideration by the author, Union Tika, and Te Punga. For a more extensive list of Stuff Nation flag posts there’s an “Assignments” section of the site asking “What should be on New Zealand’s flag?” where many individuals are reviewing and promoting submissions.

Stuff is not alone in providing a media platform for people to promote their submissions. The New Zealand Herald has published an article by Michael Smythe entitled “A flag to stand out from the crowd” where he outlines his rationale and the background to his submission.

Ultimately anyone can promote their flag design, however I believe New Zealand media companies have a responsibility to remain impartial and fairly promote a wide range of options.

Finally, it will be interesting to see how the media coverage evolves as the Flag Consideration Panel starts to whittle the submissions down to four designs for the first referendum.


  1. Bill English (29 October 2014). “Cabinet Paper 451” (PDF). beehive.govt.nz. New Zealand Government. ↩︎

  2. David King (28 October 2014). “Regulatory Impact Statement: Considering Changing the New Zealand Flag” (PDF). justice.govt.nz. New Zealand Ministry of Justice. ↩︎

International Media Coverage

As the submissions continue to be loaded into the flag.govt.nz gallery, there’s been growing international coverage about the “designs”. The Guardian picked up on the process and published an article highlighting “15 Quirky Contenders”. It’s hard not to be embarrassed by such coverage, however pointing out how poor or “quirky” some of the designs are is important. It got worse though as The Guardian collated some of our other most recent international media coverage:

Remember, by way of context, this is a nation in which the prime minister admitted to pulling a woman’s ponytail, a man was convicted of attempting to take out women’s teeth during sex, a corpse on a gurney rolled out of a hearse and onto a highway, a pet sheep was stolen and spray painted with an Isis logo on one side and “420” on the other, a runner drank her own breast milk after getting lost in the bush, and a parochial swimming pool had a six-week ordeal with a “serial pooper”.

And that’s just in the past couple of months. How do you capture those eccentricities in shape and colour alone? These bloody legends gave it a decent stab.

BuzzFeed posted another listicle of “The 20 Best Designs For The New Zealand Flag”. Number 14: “Fush & Chups” is an extremely funny and clever concept, however I have less tolerance for some of the other submissions.

Both BuzzFeed and The Guardian are clearly having a laugh with these articles. Sadly there’s been little critical coverage internationally about the process. It seems it is much easier to post links to hilariously bad submissions than write in-depth articles on identity, culture, vexillology, and design.

I’ve collected some of the other articles the flag redesign process has being mentioned in below for posterity:

Vice: This Is What Happens When You Let New Zealanders Make Their Own Flag

Huffington Post: New Zealand Asked The Internet To Design A New Flag, And This Is What They Came Up With

BBC News: The colourful contenders for New Zealand’s new flag

RT: Kiwi bird vs. Union Jack: New Zealand suggests new national flag

Daily Mail: A robot Kiwi and sheep on a rainbow: After New Zealand government asks members of the public to submit designs for a new flag, we reveal the more unusual suggestions

The Star: Could this become New Zealand’s new flag?

The Australian: New Zealand flag: designs from the public flood in

CNBC: Could a kiwi with laser eyes be on this nation’s next flag?

Gizmodo: 9 Designs That Could Finally Replace New Zealand’s Controversial Flag

The Independant: We don’t think New Zealanders are taking redesigning their national flag entirely seriously

Community Resources

As the National Road Show continues to travel around New Zealand, the flag.govt.nz site has been updated with a community ‘resource kit’. Created to help encourage discussions with “whanau, workmates or members of a community”, you can read tips about having a respectful discussion, take a quiz, and then share what you ‘stand for’ as part of the process on the standfor.co.nz site.

Here’s the tips from the document about having a respectful discussion.

Tips for a respectful discussion:

  • Encourage everyone to participate
  • Focus on responding to the discussion questions
  • All responses are valid – there are no ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ answers
  • Respect the views of others
  • Provide each other with encouraging feedback
  • Ask people to clarify what they are saying if you do not understand
  • It is ok to disagree, feel challenged or uncomfortable

As well as that helpful advice many on Twitter discussing the flag could benefit from reading, there’s a quiz with some simple questions about the history of our current flag.

New Zealand Flag Quiz:

  1. How many official national flags has New Zealand had?
  2. How was New Zealand’s first official national flag chosen?
  3. What flag did New Zealand use immediately after the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi?
  4. When did the current design become our official national flag?
  5. What is the Tino Rangatiratanga flag?
  6. In what ways is the New Zealand flag different from the Australian flag?

You can find the answers to the quiz and other information about engaging with your community at the link below.

https://www.govt.nz/assets/documents/flags/fcp-community-resource-kit.pdf

Design Guidelines & Submissions

Alongside the launch of standfor.co.nz, the flag.govt.nz site received an update with more information about the flag consideration project. As well as officially calling for entries, design guidelines covering a range of topics such as intellectual property, suggested flag ratios, common principles, and minimum submission standards were published.

Common Principles

In the guidelines document are 8 “common principles”. They’re a great starting point for the criteria in judging the success of a flag, of which I’ll write more about later. For now, here are the principles from the guidelines below:

  1. The design should be simple, uncluttered and balanced.
  2. It should be designed to be flown, and viewed from either side.
  3. It should look as “timeless” as possible. Avoid using features in the design that will cause the flag to become dated or obsolete. Imagine the flag in a historic setting and in a very modern setting to check whether it would work in both.
  4. In terms of colour, using fewer colours will keep the design simple and bold.
  5. Contrast is important – use light colours on dark, and vice-versa. So a white cross on red is a good contrast, but a blue cross on red would be a poor contrast. This is a very useful guideline, especially for choosing the colour of any symbols and their background.
  6. If the use of non-contrasting colours is unavoidable, make use of outline colours.
  7. Any animals or birds would traditionally face the flagpole, so that the animal faces in the same direction as the flag bearer.
  8. The top left hand corner of the flag is typically the place of honour in a flag. This reflects the fact that the opposite end of the flag wears out first, and is the section that is least visible when the flag is not fully unfurled.

Point number 7. is an interesting principle to include and a positive sign of the detail expected of the panel in judging a flags qualities. If for example a submission of a flag with a kiwi bird was submitted facing away from the flagpole, that would be one reason for it not to be considered.

A couple of other points in the guidelines document provide advice as to what won’t be considered:

  • Offensive or divisive designs – Flags should be a symbol of pride and unify the community they represent. For this reason, flags that are offensive to an individual or community, or that are divisive, will not be considered.
  • Flag designs that include words, photos or complex objects will not be considered.
  • Flag designs that incorporate the image of a person will not be considered.

https://www.govt.nz/assets/documents/flags/flag-design-guidelines.pdf

Submission Process

Submissions will be accepted from the 4th of May till the 16th of July 2015. Each submission requires your name (and the name of the designer if that is not you), your ethnicity, and citizenship status (all mandatory fields). Fortunately, you get a few extra characters than a tweet to describe your design. 200 words to be precise.

If you want to dive straight in and submit your design you can now do so, however before you get overly excited and press “submit” I would strongly encourage you to read the terms and conditions closely. Thankfully they’re not overwhelming long, but they’ll no doubt be controversial.

Public Engagement

The public engagement campaign for the flag consideration project officially kicked off with the launch of the standfor.co.nz site this week.

The site is primarily set up to collate answers from New Zealanders responding to the question “what do we stand for?” The purpose of which, it appears, will allow trends and common values to rise, reflecting the sentiment around the possible change in flag. The intention is then, that these insights could help guide designs for those considering submitting a concept.

By highlighting key values you can already search and discover popular terms such as; “equality”, “freedom” and “change”. There’s a diverse range of responses associated to each term ranging from the eloquent to the offensive, as well as some especially hilarious posts, as any public internet forum will attract. It is no doubt keeping the team behind the site busy, as one post mentions; “You’re gonna get awfully tired moderating an entire nation of trolls”.

Kris Sowersby also made this comment about the process thus far:

This is like those cop shows where they ask people to phone in with details about a crime for reward money, and spend weeks dealing with the crank callers and bullshit artists.

Despite the rush of posts surrounding the launch, one of the secondary goals of the site appears to be the sharing function of suggested flag designs. A section of standfor.co.nz allows a user to upload a design and see it on a flag pole.

The Flag Pole

Speaking of flag poles, you can also get your name engraved on one as part of the engagement process. If you submit a response to the question “what do we stand for?” you get an option to have your name engraved on Te Pou Herenga Tangata: Our nation’s flagpole.

UPDATE 1: Despite conflicting opinions on the typeface used in the mock-up, the Stand For NZ Twitter account confirmed it is using Guardian Egyptian Headline1. Sadly, that was not the news I was hoping for. I’m also still not convinced. Either way, it’s a weird choice considering the origins of the font.

UPDATE 2: The Stand For NZ Twitter account responded again with a further update clarifying the mock-up had defaulted to another font. It appears the intention was to use Guardian Egyptian Headline, however another typeface was displayed instead by error.

At this point it is fortunately still an artists impression of what the sculpture might look like. Hopefully a more appropriate typeface that reflects New Zealanders can be used to etch what we stand for into history.

Roadshows & Resources

Alongside the launch of the standfor.co.nz site, other details have been provided about the flag consideration project on the flag.govt.nz site.

The Flag Consideration Panel (FCP) will be travelling the country in a Toyota Hiace “to encourage all New Zealanders to share what they stand for at the nationwide roadshow, public workshops and hui.” Nothing is more New Zealand than Toyota, right? Barry Crump would be proud.

Considering the $640 per day rate the panel will get, that’s an expensive tour. I’ll be going along to the Wellington sessions in June to see what happens.

Find out when the Toyota Hiace and FCP will be visiting your town.

On a more positive note, it was impressive to see the material provided for schools to use in classrooms to encourage conversations about national identity, symbolism and the use of flags in our society.

In the resource document there’s also a timeline suggesting schools recreate the process by establishing their own judging panel, designing concepts and voting in their own referendums. I think this a great way to encourage and involve the generation likely to be most affected by a potential change. Involving the youth of New Zealand is an important and critical part of this process. They’re also represented on the Flag Consideration Panel by Stephen Jones, an Invercargill Youth Councillor.

You can read the document on the Ministry of Education site.

Finally, if after all of that it’s not clear what the difference between the two sites is; standfor.co.nz is for public engagement and flag.govt.nz is for submissions / general information.


  1. The typeface was designed for the UK newspaper The Guardian in 2004/2005 by Paul Barnes & Christian Schwartz. It is available for licensing on the Commercial Type site. ↩︎