![]() ![]() We're able to ship internationally at international shipping rates.ĭeliveries will automatically be left at the specified address by the carrier if there is no response. We currently don't offer expedited shipping options. Domestic orders $75 and up will receive free shipping. ĭomestic orders below $75 will be shipped using USPS at a flat rate. Īpparel items and accessories are usually fulfilled in 3-8 business days. Hats will be fulfilled in about 1 business day. Multiple item orders may be shipped from different locations in separate packages. Solid colors are 100% combed and ring-spun cotton.Unisex with a regular fit, if you land between sizes we suggest sizing up unless you prefer an athletic fit. In seeking out a bioregional flag, I believe that it’s the bioregion that will capture the artist-not the artist capturing the bioregion.This lightweight classic tee is super-soft and destined to become your next go-to. Like the classic Cascadian flag, also known as the “Doug Flag”, I hope this flag-as well as all my designs-will not be used for hate, exploitation, and against the values or principles of bioregionalism. We hope to sell or offer this flag only to owners or captains of vessels-ideally merchant vessels that conduct fair trade as opposed to “free trade” or vessels that have a mission of exploration, research, ecology, bioregional awareness, and/or for socioeconomic and ecological justice. The Doug” logo of the Cascadian Flag Making Cooperative. Our general goal is to provide Cascadian flags, locally produced and “artist-certified” with our logo, the symbol. Three colleagues and I have just launched the Cascadian Flag Making Cooperative. ![]() A longer flag may well serve a vessel better than a shorter one. I intentionally made the flag extra long (longer than 1:2), although I have made versions in standard proportions. It is certainly part of our collective iconography to represent bodies of water with blue and white waves. Several other flags in the Pacific Northwest have blue and white waves, including British Columbia, the Zapatopi Cascadian flag, and the city of Vancouver, B.C.-they may have played an unconscious element of my creation of Cascadian Nautical flag. The Douglas Fir echoes the central symbol of the 1995 Cascadia flag. The green isosceles triangle with its base against the hoist represents the forest-clad hills and mountains. ![]() The white waves next to the two lower blue waves represent sea foam and the crest of waves. At the bottom of the flag, the two blue waves represent the Pacific Ocean and the Salish Sea as well as the region’s rivers (Columbia, Willamette, Frazer, Snake, etc.). Between the two green waves is a single white wave that represents mist or low clouds. Two green waves are the forest-covered hills. Hence the white waves next to those two top blue waves represent snowpack and clouds. Designer: Alexander Baretich.Īt the top of the flag, the two blue and three white waves represent the mountains and partially clear sky. The Cascadian Nautical Flag: A tribute to the waters and sky of the bioregion. The “Cascadian Wave Flag” is a tribute to the bioregion’s waters and sky. In 2012, nearly 17 years after designing the popular Cascadian flag, I created a nautical flag for Cascadia, specifically for vessels of oceans, rivers, and the sky. and Canada’s Pacific Northwest ( see VT #36). By Alexander Baretich, Vexilloid Tabloid #53Ĭascadia is a bioregion roughly encompassing Oregon, Washington, British Columbia and parts of other states and provinces in the U.S. ![]()
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