Last modified: 2024-11-23 by rick wyatt
Keywords: united states | variation | christian fish | swastika | hearts | copyleft |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
Over time, there have been discussions about variations of the U.S. flag as seen in movies, TV serials, cartoons, etc... and some that were used in real life.
Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
50 skulls and bones flag
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
50 oil drums flag
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
50 swastikas flag
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
A similar design is used in the cover of the book en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PKD-high_castle-penguinclassics.jpg The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick, as published in 2001 by Penguin Books, where the swastikas are however upright.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 4 May 2009
Earthquake flag
image by Clay Moss, 25 July 2018
image by Clay Moss, 25 July 2018
One morning in the early 1980s, the store manager of The Flag Store in San
Francisco, Jim Ferrigan, and his assistant manager, Jim Zook, were at Paramount
Flag Company of San Francisco, picking up inventory. They wanted to inspect one
of the custom flags that had been ordered at the store and went to a layout
table to unfurl it. At that same table a long time Paramount employee, Miriam,
was placing stars on a blue canton to make a standard US flag.
When the
two men unfurled custom flag to place it onto the table it caused the unpinned
stars on Miriam's US flag to be blown into the canton’s corners. Jim Zook, an
artist, was struck by the randomized pile of stars that the unexpected puff of
air had created and asked Miriam to pin the stars in place and have it sewn up
into a U.S. flag for the store. The resulting flag was first christened the
“Falling Star Flag” or “Fallen Stars Flag” and would be displayed, sometimes on
the wall and sometimes in the window, usually vertically, at the Flag Store, as
an item of novelty décor. It was displayed without any explanation as an optical
joke.
One summer day an unnamed German tourist queried Was ist das? Eine
Erdbebenfahne? (What is that? An earthquake flag?) Jim Zook, who understood
German, immediately realized the potential, and the so-called “Earthquake Flag”
was born.
Once the flag had been named it moved from optical novelty to
production item and different sizes, fabrics and styles were eventually made
available. In the fall of that year the Smithsonian Curator Harold Langley
requested one for the Smithsonian's’ Museum of History and Technology (now the
National Museum of American History) and it became part of the national
collection and is known as the San Francisco "Earthquake Flag.”
Today,
the Paramount Flag Company no longer exists and the Earthquake flag is no longer
manufactured, but it still brings a smile to the faces of flag enthusiasts when
seen or mentioned. Special thanks to Jim Ferrigan who shared this story with me.
The flag is used both vertically and horizontally. The most common display is
vertical.
Pete Loeser, 25 July 2018
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
Jim Ferrigan tells me there were actually three versions of the Earthquake
Flag produce (once they caught on) designed to show the pile of fallen stars at
different angles; the vertical one, the horizontal version and one for 45 degree
display.
Pete Loeser, 26 July 2018
Here are a few more renditions of the same concept of "fallen stars"
(regarding the U.S. flag):
- "Deconstructed Flag #2 (Out of Order)" by Brian
Kenny, 2012
Flag:
http://pictify.saatchigallery.com Source:
http://pictify.saatchigallery.com/260774/deconstructed-flag-2-out-of-order-by-brian-kenny-2012
"Part of a series of works by the artist Brian Kenny (official website:
http://briankenny.work), “Deconstructed
Flag” focuses
specifically on what it means to be gay and neglected in
America. In an interview with the Huffington Post, Kenny says: “I feel
discontent with the current political and economic system that allows for so
much corruption and social injustice. I wanted to express this discontent in my
art, so I learned how to sew and made a series of deconstructed American flags
with fallen or removed stars and stripes.”" (source:
http://www.sleek-mag.com/2016/11/30/american-flag-art)
- "Broken" by
Stanley Bermudez (n.d.)
Flag:
https://objects.artspan.com/member/sbermudez/500/2078987.jpg
Source:
https://www.stanleybermudez.com/lg_view_multi.php?aid=2078987
-
Unknown (this image portrays the fallen stars in a different manner than the
"Earthquake flag").
Flag:
https://thumb9.shutterstock.com/display_pic_with_logo/1375057/397347745/stock-vector-us-flag-with-all-the-stars-fallen-down-to-the-bottom-397347745.jpg
Source:
https://www.shutterstock.com/image-vector/us-flag-all-stars-fallen-down-397347745
Of the three, the one by Brian Kenny does exist as a real flag although
it's part of an art exhibit only.
Esteban Rivera, 25 July 2018
Soviet United States of America flag
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
In the 1980s in USA was made the film "Amerika" (fiction about Soviet occupation of USA). I remember two flags: a flag of occupied USA - "Soviet United States of America" - 'Stars and Stripes' with white hammer and sickle in the canton and without stars - and a flag of American communists-traitors - red flag with two white ovals with portraits of Lenin and Lincoln.
Victor Lomantsov, 3 March 2001
Communist flag variants
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
image by Jorge Candeias, 3 March 2001
This flag appeared in the magazine/comic was "Treasure Chest". See
http://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2003_11_24.html where it gives a little history of Treasure Chest, and shows an additional image of the USSA Hammer&Sickle flag from the "What a Family's Life Would be Like in a Communist United States" feature (part of Treasure Chest's "Godless Communism" series, which ran about the same time- the comic carried a written endorsement from J. Edgar Hoover, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation).
Ned Smith, 17 January 2006
Anti-Corporate Flags
image by Phil Nelson, 27 June 2001
See also: Anti-Corporate Flags
Christian fish symbol on flag
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 9 September 2007
I saw in the window of a nearby conservative evangelical bookstore both the familiar "Christian" flag and a new design I had not seen before - the same as the S&S but with a white "ichthys" fish symbol in place of
the stars in the canton.
Joe McMillan, 25 January 2002
Copyleft symbol on flag
image by Tomislav Todorovic, 7 July 2007
Here is a variant of the USA flag I saw on the Web with the white copyleft symbol instead of the stars in the canton can be found on the Web at:
www.chrononaut.org/~dm/images/misc/copyleft-flag.jpg. It seems to be the photo of a real flag, although it is not absolutely certain, as I have not seen it anywhere else.
Tomislav Todorovic, 7 July 2007
Hearts on flag
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 23 August 2010
50 white hearts for stars, canton detail used to illustrate the online version of Bono Vox's op-ed in the New
York Times www.nytimes.com/2009/10/18/opinion/18bono.html "Rebranding America" 2009.10.17. This design illustrates the author's idea of well-wishers's view of of "what they wish America to be."
António Martins-Tuválkin, 23 August 2010