flags of the united states
An industrial designer at
Philadelphia product design firm Bresslergroup, Ed Mitchell, redesigns all 50
U.S. State Flags. His new project, United We Stand, feature new, simple, and
bold design of State Flags using a
unified design theme. All flags designs are limited to blue, white and red
colors. You won’t see ornate state seals and text in the designs. For
information, there are 27 flags that feature state seals. He did this according
rules including simplicity so a child could draw it from memory, no seals or
text, appropriate imagery, not more than three basic colors, and a
characteristic look that doesn’t confuse with other flags.
Some people and critics
consider his design as controversial since he removes all state seals and their
unique colors. For example, he removes the bear image in the California State Flag, redesign whole flag
appearance and add blue color (there is no blue in the real flag). He also
removes the “California Republic” text and put the large C letter instead but
keep the star image. The Delaware flag has the most drastic change by removing
fuzzy emblem image of a worker and a soldier with picture of wolf, ship and
text. He changes
it with a simple image of a plant on a shield with blue
background. The least modification of the flag is Texas. He only changes the
color without changing the images.
The flags of the U.S. states exhibit a wide variety of regional influences and local histories, as well as widely different styles & design principles. Modern state flags date from the 1890s when states wanted to have distinctive symbols at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Most state flags were designed & adopted between 1893 and World War I.
source : wikipedia