Last modified: 2024-09-14 by ian macdonald
Keywords: new zealand | aotearoa | blue ensign | southern cross |
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Flag adopted 12 June 1902
Use: National Flag and Government Ensign
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Based on the British Blue Ensign, the New Zealand flag consists of the Union Flag in the upper hoist position, and the Southern Cross represented by four five-pointed stars in the fly.
image by Sam Lockton and António Martins, 22 June 2005
The stars on the NZ flag are not a "true" cross, they fall at the
relative positions of the stars Acrux, Mimosa, Gacrux and delta Crucis, and
as such the "crossbar" doesn’t intersect the upright at 90 degrees.
James Dignan, 30 August 1999
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.
Dylan Crawfoot, 24 August 1999, quoting from New Zealand’s Government flag page
In ‘The New Zealand Ensign’, produced by the Historical Publications Branch
of the Department of Internal Affairs, 1965, W.A.Glue wrote, “Twelve preferred
the flag already used by the Church Missionary Society at the Bay of Islands”
and then added this footnote:
“Some writers have claimed that the four stars
represented the Southern Cross. James Laurenson, an industrious and painstaking
researcher, does not accept this: ‘A lot has been written that out early New
Zealand flag had the Southern Cross Stars. That is wrong. They were the stars of
England, heraldic and religious stars, and each point has a deep meaning.’
Letter dated 25 July 1940 (rough copy – punctuation has been added).”
David Prothero, 18 October 2012
Traditionally the New Zealand flag was specified as "Navy Blue" and
this would correspond to PMS 281 or PMS 282. However, I note that the French Pavillons Album states the shade of blue to be PMS 287 - a lighter shade than
PMS 280. My personal observations have been that normally, a well produced New
Zealand flag has the same shade of blue colour as an Australian flag, or if
there is a difference the New Zealand blue is typically darker than the
Australian blue.
The 1989 edition of BR20 "Flags of all Nations" Change 5
defined "Navy Blue" as PMS 282C and "Royal Blue" as PMS 280C. I note that Graham
Bartram's "British Flags and Emblems" defines the Union Jack blue as PMS280.
Ralph Kelly, 18 October 2010
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics (Flags
and Anthems Manual London 2012) provides recommendations for national flag
designs. Each NOC was sent an image of the flag, including the PMS shades, for
their approval by LOCOG. Once this was obtained, LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm
version of the flag for further approval. So, while these specs may not be the
official, government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the NOC
believed the flag to be.
For New Zealand, PMS 186 red, 280 blue. The
vertical flag is the horizontal version reversed and turned 90 degrees
anti-clockwise
Ian Sumner, 11 October 2012
The National flags and ensigns defined in Flags, Emblems, and Names
Protection Act 1981 with illustrations:
https://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1981/0047/latest/whole.html
This page gives construction details and color values in Pantone:
https://www.mch.govt.nz/our-work/flags-anthems-and-emblems/new-zealand-flag
The colors of the flag are as follows:
White (Pantone SAFE)
Red
(Pantone 186C)
Blue (Pantone 280C).
Zoltan Horvath, 8 August 2024
The Flag Manual - Beijing 2008 gives Pantone colors: PMS 032 (red), and PMS
281 (blue).
The Album des Pavillons 2000 [pay00]
(Corr. No. 4.) gives approximate colors in Pantone and CMYK systems:
Blue:
Pantone 287c, CMYK 100-70-0-10
Red: Pantone 186c, CMYK 0-90-80-5
Yellow:
Pantone Yellow c, CMYK 0-0-100-0
Crimson: Pantone 187c, CMYK 0-90-70-25
Light blue: Pantone 279c, CMYK 70-35-0-0
Green: Pantone 362c, CMYK
75-0-100-10
The Album des Pavillons 2023 specifies the colors of the
flags in three color systems:
Light Blue: Pantone 279c, CMYK 73-41-0-0, RGB
65-137-221
Blue: Pantone 287c, CMYK 100-83-7-0, RGB 0-53-152
Red: Pantone
186c, CMYK 10-100-74-20, RGB 210-16-52
Crimson: Pantone 187c, CMYK
21-98-73-13, RGB 179-27-52
Yellow: Pantone Yellow c, CMYK 0-0-100-0, RGB
255-255-0
Green: Pantone 362c, CMYK 80-12-100-2, RGB 40-151-40
Vexilla Mundi gives colors in Pantone
system: PMS 280C (blue), PMS 186C (red), and PMS White.
Wikipedia refers to the Government
website, illustrates the flag, provides construction details, and gives Pantone
color values: "The exact colours are specified as Pantone 186 C (red), Pantone
280 C (blue), and white."
Flag Color Codes gives the following color values:
Red: Hex # C8102E, RGB 200-16-46, CMYK 0-100-80-5, Pantone 186, RAL 3028
Blue:
Hex # 012169, RGB 1-33-105, CMYK 100-85-0-39, Pantone 280, RAL 5026
White: Hex #FFFFFF, RGB 255-255-255, CMYK 0-0-0-0, Pantone & RAL n/a
Zoltan Horvath, 8 August 2024
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