Last modified: 2024-03-23 by rick wyatt
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image by Rick Wyatt, 28 August 2013
from Appalachian Alliance:
WHY a Flag of Appalachia? To represent the people of Appalachia, beyond politically imposed borders, and all its potential that is within its people. Appalachia is home to nearly 25 million people, as the borders are defined by the Appalachian Region Commission, that extends across the globe increasing the number of people from Appalachia exponentially. We proudly fly our flag, while telling the REAL story of Appalachia.
Color and symbol interpretation:
source: hillbillylandinthesky.blogspot.com
While searching for a possible flag for Berea College in Berea, Kentucky in the Appalachian region of the eastern united States, I encountered a blog belonging to a poet hitherto unknown to me named as David Wayne Hampden. When scrolling down this blog depicts a flag described as the Appalachian Flag.
hillbillylandinthesky.blogspot.com.
Ron Lahav, 12 March 2008
Here is the blog of the designer of the flag: Tennessee Jed
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 12 March 2008
image located by David Sigley, 1 July 2023
A new Appalachian flag just dropped:
https://appalachianflag.wordpress.com/
The Appalachian Flag
Initiative is a grassroots cooperative working towards supporting the
Appalachian regional identity through healthy and productive means, ensuring
that all Appalachians are represented.
This banner was finalized in 2023
after over a year of discussion and contributions by Appalachians through online
social media discussions, primarily through websites such as Reddit, Facebook,
and Twitter. Through the year, the design slowly changed and morphed based off
of aesthetic principle and community input.
Finally, this design was chosen
from a list of 6 possible designs in an online vote taken by over 300
participants from Appalachian social media groups, receiving a vast majority of
the votes. Following the vote, the design was placed under Creative Commons as
to ensure the highest degree of ease of access is available to Appalachians
interested in representing their region.
Color Scheme
* The green is
representative of the lush forests that wraparound p the ancient mountains and
the rural setting of the region.
* The navy blue is representative of the
blue hue that colors the distant ridgelines that rest on the horizon while
traveling through Appalachia.
* The gold is representative of the morning sun
pouring out over the distant hills, indicative of a bright future for those who
reside in these hills.
* The off-white of the quilt star motif is taken from
the color of cloth, indicative of a blank canvas from which each Appalachian may
draw their own colorful story.
* Altogether, the design forms a depiction of
the beautiful mountain landscape that is distinctly unique to the Appalachian
region.
Design Elements
* The quilt star is a symbol found throughout
Appalachian arts and crafts, commonly seen on the facades of barns and in the
construction of quilts in many Appalachian homes. the inclusion of this symbol
is meant to symbolize the unique Appalachian people that reside within the
mountains, with every rendition of the star being done in the artist's style and
coloration, further including the diverse array of cultures, faces, and
backgrounds in the Appalachian people.
* The horizontal construction of the
flag is meant to convey the message of the overlapping scenes of the mountains
on the horizon.
* The jagged peaks, while not common in much of Appalachia,
are meant to convey a stronger symbol of mountains and match the quilt star's
geometry.
* The rolling lines of the rolling hills flag is meant to be closer
to the reality of the Appalachian mountains for many people, conveying the
actual topography of these weathered ancient mountains that many of us call
home.
* the broken color fragments of the mountain quilt is meant to convey
the analogy of a quilt, a common craft that can be found throughout Appalachia.
David Sigley, 1 July 2023