Last modified: 2005-12-31 by bruce berry
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Above is construction sheet from Palac, translated from French to Spanish. Pierre Palac is a graphic designer (and vex fan) working for a international organization in Paris. He was asked by the CDR embassy in Paris for draw the sheet for manufacturers. If I don't remember wrong a lot of flags were made and sent to Congo according his drawing. Unfortunately sheet was drawn according the Palac work system. When sheet was published in Flag Report #6 was under the following notes:
"Image based on the official construction table accomplished by Pierre Palac by assignment of the government of the Democratic Republic of Congo, through the Embassy in Paris, politely transmitted by the own author 16 December 1997. Phrases translated from French to Spanish. Accordant accomplished image to the graphic and with the established Pantone tones (blue 286 C, yellow 109 C)".
Jaume Ollé, 22 February 2001
My information on DR cONGO flags:
the dark shade of blue had been fixed by a South African (if I remember
correctly) manufacturer in lack of official shades. So there are (or were)
no official colour specifications. [BTW: Another South African manufacturer
even made the (later CDR) flags with diagonal stripe (in sky blue).] AP
reported in May 1997 that "more than 100 flags have been send to Congo".
The photograph shot in that firm showed the blue-yellow-red flag of Congo-Kinshasa,
the blue being about Pantone 292.
All photos we know show different colour shades, where the later photos
have a quite similar lighter blue.
Flag report's construction sheet may have been done for the government,
but I doubt that it was adopted, as too many difficulties are produced
in that specification.
The AFF would give for the blue pantone 292 or 299 or 300. Someone
mentioned that shade of blue in Congo's flag is sky blue. Pantone 286 is
no sky blue at all, you may agree. But 285 comes closer to a sky blue ;-).
An official internet site of Congo DR showed the flag light blue at http://www.congonline.com/Politiq/PolDrapeaux.htm
but slightly darker than on FOTW Congo-historic, the big star is in the
center of the flag.
Ralf Stelter, AFF, 22 February 2001
I have to add that the congonline.com flags are taken from http://home.wxs.nl/~marksens/descr/zr.htm
(site is closed, ed.)
Sadly here an official website is decorated with unconfirmed illustrations.
But I think Mark's interpretation of the new cd flag is quite good.
Ralf Stelter, AFF, 22 February 2001
Regarding the above "spec sheet": The flag of Congo DR is one flag made
of one cloth and is one single piece. The six small stars are part of the
field as is the large star, not a separate part of the flag, as for example
the hoist stripes of Belarus or Khakassia. So the large star has to be
in the center of the flag! At least optically. Stars are usually described
by circles, not by squares. The sheet took squares, so the large star is
not only off-centered to the fly, but also to the bottom (looks like the
small stars want to get rid of it ;-) ). The diameter of the large star
is half the width of the flag says the specification data we have, and
the small stars are 1/3 of the large star. If you follow these information
a very different design than this "spec sheet" will result - and I guess
there is nothing more than we have.
Ralf Stelter, 27 February 2001
Here I add for the first Congo DR flag, drawn after "specifications"
which I made from the infos about Congo DR the AFF has.
It is not official, but only my work. Older photographs show the flag
quite similar to these specifications, newer photographs do not. So here
are some facts about the flag we collected to construct a specification
sheet which is not official but is quite reliable in heraldic, vexillological
and aesthetical opinions. The result is a flag that even the government
of Congo DR might accept:
1) the colour is defined as blue for the sky
2) the large star is 1/2 of the flag's height
3) the small stars are 1/3 of the large one
The result is a quite strange arrangement of the small stars as they
are too close together.
4) Someone defined the blue as Pantone 286. One source even gives Reflex
Blue.
A) Early photographs show a flag with a dark blue cloth and small stars close together.0) So the first specifications published about the flag might either have been official or were made after photographs.
B) The Congo DR website shows a light blue flag from the very beginning.
C) Later photographs show a lighter shade of blue and the small stars a bit smaller than before.
I checked the other day with the Embassy of Congo-Kinshasa in Washington
DC and they confirmed that the new flag is the six small stars and one
large star flag of 1960. I asked about
the colour of the background and they replied that it was sky-blue. Of
course sky-blue can be anything from ultramarine to the palest blue, but
it normally means light blue.
Graham Bartram, 12 Jun 1997
The exact shade of blue in the first independentist flag was never specified
and so many variations in color existed. In fact, as a descendant of the
Congo
Free State (also known as Belgian Congo), the darker blue is more appropriate
since that flag was specified as a dark blue.
Dave Martucci, 02 Dec 1997
I remember reading somewhere (I'll try to find the source) that light
blue was deliberately chosen in 1960 for two reasons: to distinguish the
post-independence flag from that of the Congo Free State and to acknowledge
the role of the United Nations in securing the country's independence -
the Belgians were reluctant decolonisers.
Vincent Morley, 03 Dec 1997
The color of the flag seems to date back to the 19th century, from books
I have. The "Congo Free State" flag as described and shown in Pedersen's
book of 1970 [ped70] says it was introduced
in 1885, with the concept of the "Free State". The book Flags of the
World, Past and Present [hol39], of
1939, says "The governor-General of the Congo also hoists a square tricolour,
but with the flag of the Congo in the canton. This flag is bright blue,
and has a yellow star thereon." The fact that the government issued postage
stamps (in 1961) showing one colour or shade of blue, while government had
another, lighter shade, is not surprising. The fact that some flags in
current pictures have all sorts of "designs" in homemade flags is not surprising.
Steve Stringfellow, 03 Dec 1997
Please, consider that in heraldry there is no difference among shades
of colours. Even metallic gold and yellow or metallic silver and white
are exactly the same thing. This turned out in an heritage for vexillology,
at least until colour standards appeared. So, there is no way to state
which shade of blue was correct for the Free State of Congo or most of
other flags all around the world. Only in recent years governments started
to define their official colours using standards. Before that blue was
blue, whatever shade one decided to use. Moreover, different types of paintings
behave differently under light, so that some of them wear more and loose
their brightness more easily than others, which means that at different
times you see different shades for the same flag. When this happens without
an official prescription for colours, flag lasts more... and it is cheaper.
Pier Paolo Lugli, 06 Dec 1997
I saw a very good image of the flag in TV, and the stars are pointing
up the first, third, fifth and sixth, and pointing down the second and fourth.
The stars are larger than in the old pattern, and each one threshold with
the other.
Jaume Ollé, 9 Apr 1997
The Flemish newspaper De Standaard featured a picture yesterday from
AP showing a child with a small flag with would should be the flag of
Congo-Kinshasa. But it had a six-pointed star, not a five-pointed star. The
picture didn't show the small stars at the hoist, but I would reckon they would
be six-pointed too. The caption said that the flag was held by a daughter of a
member of the embassy of Congo to Kigali (Rwanda) but one
should expect that they would know how their flag looks like.
Filip Van Laenen, 11 Sep 1997
The Göteborgs-Posten of 11 September 1997, includes a photo
(Š Brennan Linsley) of the President of Congo-Kinshasa, Laurent Kabila,
and the President of Rwanda, Pasteur Bizimungu, and
in front of Mr. Kabila is a small flag of Congo — with 5-pointed stars.
Christian Berghänel, 11 Sep 1997
In May 1997 Associated Press reported with a photograph that more than
100 new flags for the new Congo had been manufactured in a Johannesburg
(South Africa). The photo shows Sheraldine Mohammed with the
new flags made by her factory. Interesting: the flags were of light blue
with the red stripe and star. Questions: who ordered the flags? Who received
them? Any help from South Africa? Note the photo is copyrighted by AP.
Ralf Stelter, 18 April 2001
The flags were made in 1997 following the demise of the Mobuto regime
in the then Zaire. The flags were made by National Flag, a flag manufacturing
company in Johannesburg. At the time it was unclear as to which of the
previous flag designs used in the Congo would be reinstated and the Company
was approached by representatives of the new government to make up flags
which were to have been used at the inauguration of the President Laurent Kabila. Instructions given to National Flag were that the preferred design
was the one used in the Congo between 1963 - 1971, immediately prior to
the change to Zaire. However, this proved to be incorrect and the 1960
dark blue flag was later chosen to be the new flag of the renamed
Democratic
Republic of Congo.
The incorrect flags were kept by the manufacturer and sold off to collectors
etc, and I have one in my collection. If anyone is interested, I can find
out whether any of these flags are still "in stock". The whole affair was
really a case of "jumping the gun" and I think most of us can recall the
initial hesitation on the part of the members of the new Congolese regime
in deciding which flag to revert to.
The blue on the flags is somewhat darker than that shown in the photograph.
Bruce Berry, 18 April 2001