Flags For Our Fathers
In honor of the upcoming Independence Day celebrations, I have created a few different flags inside InDesign.
Before I get started, I wanted to share with you my inspiration for this post. Steven Colbert’s Book, I Am America and So Can You has beautiful typography and it gave me the idea for this post.
Also after working on this post, I did a quick search to see if anyone else has done this before and sure enough, Keith Gilbert wrote up a wonderful tutorial for a similar, but different, effect inside InDesign.
Now that I have my inspiration out of the way, let’s get started.
The American Flag
I began by creating a rectangular text frame and pasted in the first few lines from the Declaration of Independence. After increasing the line spacing, I added a red underline with a negative offset and increased the underline’s thickness.
Next, I centered the text “we hold” in a blue text frame and used text wrap to push the 1st four lines over to finish the US flag.
French Flag
Since Bastille Days is upon us before we know it (July 14th if you don’t), I also created the French flag. I started the same way, but used line styles (CS4 only) for each section. Afterward, I just rotated the frame to its current state.
German Flag
I repeated the process with the German Flag for their Unity Day celebration on October 3rd (just a little bit early). I even tried to apply Keith’s technique, but unfortunately, it falls apart when you try and put the type on a path.
What you end up doing with the flags is up to your imagination.
Just one comment: German Unity Day is not that far away. October 3rd. ;-)
From Wikipedia:
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Germany)
As summarised by heraldist Arnold Rabbow in 1968, “the German colours are black-red-yellow but they are called black-red-gold.”
Sorry Fritz, but your german flags have the wrong color. The “gold” should be like Pantone 7405 C