When looking for
flag designs for my hometown, Superior, Wisconsin, I did not come up with any
results, which I found to be more exciting than if I had actually found one. I
knew that it would be more fun to try to come up with a design that did not –
intentionally or unintentionally – mimic anything already in existence.
Before I
actually started with the design, I decided that I needed to come up with a
list of important or well-known aspects of Superior. The list included the
town's namesake Lake Superior, the logging and paper industries, iron ore
mining, our sister city, Duluth, Minnesota, the famous Aerial Lift Bridge, and
shipping. The video had mentioned that there should be two to three colors, and
I decided immediately that there should be blue and green, blue to represent
Lake Superior, which is one of the largest contributors to our local economy,
and green to represent the huge forests used for the paper mills and logging. I
knew that a third color I would use would be black, to represent the iron ore
industry, which is one of the largest industries in the Northland, a reason why
the region is often called the Iron Range.
Next, I needed
to decide on shapes. As much as I wanted to include a ship or a bridge on a sea
of blue, I felt that the two designs would be complicated, especially
considering the complex design of the Aerial Lift Bridge itself, iconic though it
is in its representation of the Twin Ports (Superior and Duluth). I chose
instead to have a blue triangle on the right side of the flag, which represents
Lake Superior. It takes up about half of the flag because it is the largest
freshwater lake in the world, and plays a large part in the lives of the people
who live near it. I then decided that the rest of the flag should simply be
green, to show the forests that are used for paper mills and logging. In order
to truly represent where Superior sits in relation to the lake, I put a black
star – again, black for iron ore mining – right at the apex of the blue
triangle, where the city sits right at the tip of Lake Superior when looking at
maps. In order to also include our relationship with Duluth, Minnesota, I put a
smaller star above and to the right of the larger star. The relationship
between Superior and Duluth, nicknamed the Twin Ports, largely has to do with
mining and shipping, both of which use Lake Superior extensively for transport.
Although it is technically a flag for Superior, I felt that Duluth was too
closely intertwined in my city’s economy and culture to leave it out. If there
were one thing that I wish I could have included, it would definitely have been
something that would indicate the Native Americans who are prominent in the
area, and the importance that they have had in our culture in not only
Superior, but in the entire Iron Range.
Great design, first off! However, I was think that you might not need to divide the colors on the flag like so. Are all of the industries equally important? If you wanted to suggest that all these industries are equal, I would suggest just having three colors that line up horizontally. I'm not quite sure where the stars come from, either. Having stars on your flag might look repetitive since so many other flags have stars, too. I really like your idea about including Native American history into your flag. If you did that, however, you'd need to be careful to not make the symbol particularly offensive (like Cleveland Indians).
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