Last modified: 2005-03-19 by rick wyatt
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3:5 by Željko Heimer, 16 August 2003
See also:
Overall ratio 3:5. (48 x 80 units if you wish). Two stripes at fly together 1/8
of the hoist (H), i.e. 6 units. White stripe 1/5 of the blue, i.e. white 1
units, and blue 5 units (together 6 units as required above).
Blue disk in the center of the red field (NB! not in the center of the flag!)
with diameter 1/2 H, i.e. 24 units. White ring surrounding it as wide as the
white stripe at hoist, so outer diameter, 26 units.
Because the star dimensions are defined somewhat vaguely ("as closely as
practicable without actually touching" each other or the white ring), the rest
of the construction is also vague - and that is the main reason why the exact
figures cannot be given.
The star centers are not on a circle of half the diameter of the
blue circle (that would give too much distance between their two "outer" rays
and the white ring), but they should be on a circle with somewhat larger
diameter then half the blue diameter. One has to choose here - and my choice was
to enlarge the "half the blue" diameter by 4%. The choice of this enlargement
would make a slight difference to the result of the following numbers.
The triangle is inscribed in the virtual circle containing the star centers. The
rotation of that triangle (from 0 degrees meaning one point at 12 o'clock),
should be such that a line extended from one of its sides would intersect a
vertical median of the flag (line connecting midpoints of the upper and lower
edges of the flag) and the midpoint of the lower edge. This is the key
requirement! The rotation to match this request for the diameter chosen above
yields about 44.5 degrees. One may safely say that 45 degrees is a good
approximation for practical purposes, I guess.
The result is the "nearest-dearest&q