
THE thrill of visiting an historic site or official building is often heightened by the flamboyant fluttering of bright colours high above it, making some bold declaration that is sometimes lost to the uninitiated. During the past year alone, national joy and sorrow were expressed a great deal through the flying of flags. Their hoisting is a statement that anyone can make, but requires a few careful considerations to prevent an embarrassing faux pas.
Most likely to be used across the United Kingdom is the Union Jack or Flag. Its design layers the cross of St George (for England) above the crosses of St Andrew (Scotland) and St Patrick (Northern Ireland). Unfortunately, Wales does not get a look in, being a principality. The Flag Institute (www.flaginstitute. org) warns that ‘the Union Flag has a correct way up—in the half of the flag nearest the flagpole, the wider diagonal white stripe must be above the red diagonal stripe’—meaning that Scotland takes precedence over Ireland. And despite their growing popularity in interiors, ‘it is improper to use national flags as a table or seat cover,’ as the Institute points out. A serious vexillologist—someone who studies flags —abhors their use as anything but a flag, out of respect. Those Union Jack cushion covers may seem very patriotic, but you are actually sitting on a national symbol. Sorry.
Denne historien er fra March 15, 2023-utgaven av Country Life UK.
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Denne historien er fra March 15, 2023-utgaven av Country Life UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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A brush with greatness
Victor Hugo found solace in art, but dismissed his drawings as mere things made 'during hours of almost unconscious reverie'. Now, a Royal Academy exhibition reveals how powerfully they engage the imagination

Havens and hideaways
Some houses offer that little bit extra– a garden building to enhance your quality of life

A night on the tiles
From bloody beginnings of drunken mayhem in public houses, it is somewhat surprising that the game of dominoes reached pearl-encrusted heights in our royal palaces

The legacy Gertrude Jekyll and herbaceous planting
Until Gertrude Jekyll showed us how to plant a flower border brimming with satisfying waves of colour, form and texture, no one had thought to do it.

Building on a dream
Evenley Wood Garden, Northamptonshire When Nicola Taylor took on her plantsman father's flower-filled woodland, she knew more about horses than trees, but, as Tiffany Daneff discovers, that hasn't stopped her from making a great success of the garden

Take a seat
What makes a chair supremely comfortable? The rake, the suspension system, the frame or the fillings

Sour to the people
Vibrant, tangy and full of flavour, malt vinegar is still the best British condiment to slosh over hot fish and chips

My favourite painting Sir James MacMillan
Le Christ en banlieue (Christ in the suburbs)

The architect for me
In the first of two articles, Clive Aslet explores the relationship between Sir Edwin Lutyens and perhaps his most important private client, the politician and financier Reginald McKenna

Directors take centre stage
The imaginative vision of those behind the scenes brings out the best acting in Shakespeare and Chekhov revivals