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1.1.2.3 White, gold, black, red, green ... and other multicolored emblems are sorted only by their color fields. The color of text is almost entirely ignored ...
Neither the colours nor the arrangement of the early tricolours were standardised. All of the 1848 tricolours showed green, white and orange, but orange was sometimes put next to the staff, and in at least one flag the order was orange, green and white. [8] In 1850 a flag of green for the Roman Catholics, orange for the Protestants of the ...
Red, white and green Gold Pakistan: Green and white Lime green and gold (sports) Philippines: Blue, red, white and yellow Qatar: Maroon and white Saudi Arabia: Green and white Lavender [8] Singapore: Red and white Blue (football) Sri Lanka: Blue and yellow Maroon, yellow, orange, green (flag colours) and white Syria: Red, white, black and green ...
Flag of Scotland; Flag of Scotland (color variation) Flag of Scotland (color variation) Flag of the Church of Scotland; Scottish Union Jack; Flag of the Secwépemc; Flag of Serbia; Flag of Serbia and Montenegro (1992-2006) Flag of the Serbian Orthodox Church; Flag of Sergipe; Flag of Seychelles; Flag of the Shetland Islands; Flag of Sierra ...
A guide on using colors in web design and development, covering color theory, accessibility, and practical applications.
A flag with green and white stripes was used until 1692. [3] The green and white colors represented the House of Braganza and the national colours of Portugal. In 1692, that flag was no longer used by ships that sailed to Brazil and became the flag of the merchant vessels in coastal Portugal. In 1692, a new flag was introduced for merchant ...
The uniforms of Australia's national sports teams are usually green and gold. [8] The golden wattle flower, and the colours green and gold, are also featured on the Coat of arms of Australia. According to the Australian government, "green and gold have been popularly embraced as Australia’s national sporting colours" since the late 1800s. [1]
Yellow is the colour used by supporters of the Catalan independence movement. Since 2017, separatists adopted the yellow ribbon as one of their symbols along with the estelada (pro-independence flag). Yellow is the customary colour of Canarian nationalism, with blue and white, the other colours in the flag of the Canary Islands, also being used.