Promotional video for the School of Design at Leeds – please take a look
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZSFkewV-ZY
This was a picture taken whilst shopping in Tesco today. There are union jack flags everywhere you look at the moment in the UK. The Olympics has not even started yet – the reason there are so many flags already is, of course, the sixtieth anniversary of the Queen taking the throne of the UK. The red, white and blue colours of the union flag – red = Pantone 186 (C), blue = Pantone 280 (C) – derive from a combination of the three flags from England, Scotland and Ireland.
The English flag dates from 1194 when Richard I introduced the cross of St George as the national flag of England.
The Scottish flag was a diagonal white cross on a blue background.
When Queen Elizabeth I died, the scottish king James (King James VI of Scotland) inherited the throne of England and became James I. James I proclaimed himself King of Great Britain and essentially unified England and Scotland. But which flag to use? A new flag was created that was a combination of the previous two and known as the Union flag. A white boarder was added around the red cross because the rules of heraldry demanded that two colours must never touch each other.
The union flag was used at sea from 1606 but became the national flag of Great Britain in 1707 under the reign of Queen Anne. We now had the United Kingdom of Great Britain. In 1801 Ireland became part of the United Kingdom. The Irish flag had been a diagonal red cross on a white background.
The combination of all three flags resulted in the familiar Union Jack.
The name was later changed to United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland when the greater part of Ireland left the United Kingdom in 1921.
Why is Wales not represented in the Union Jack? To read why this is please visit here.
An interesting project, Color Forecast, has been developed by Pedro Cruz and runs feeds from high definition cameras in Milan, Paris and Antwerp to track the colour of fashions worn across the cities.The software analyzes the passing colors and shows in real time which colors are worn most often, then the colors are compiled into an infographic to see how trends evolve. For further information see here.
If you are looking for inspiration for a colour scheme then you could do worse than look at the Kuler web site.
For more information see http://thecolorrun.com/
Interesting article about a guy who built his own colour-measurement device at home from simple components.
Red, what could I say about the colour red?
Some people call it the colour of love, for me, it’s far from that.
Red is for me the colour of blood. It’s the colour of anger and hate.
Some really stunning photographs taken in Mongolia in 1913.