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What makes a good flag design? In this short video, the New Zealand Designers Institute have outlined five principles of design and how they can be applied to flags. These five principles are: Simplicity, colour, the rule of thirds, symmetry and asymmetry, and context. The first, is simplicity. Flag design is an exercise in simplicity: the composition of basic elements in a defined field, a reduced colour palette, and no language. The process should be reductive. Its as much about whats not included as what is. A great example is the Japanese flag: a white rectangle with a red circle representing the sun, an important symbol in Japanese culture. The design is also cognisant of its end use, because when its flying, it puts the sun in the sky and reads the same from either side. The flag of Greenland was redesigned in 1985 and is elegantly simple. It echoes the landscape, showing ice, ocean and a sun setting below the horizon. Both of these flags take meaningful symbolism to its pures