Buy Iceland National Flags Online • Flag Shop
search
  • Buy Iceland National Flags Online • Flag Shop

DISCOUNT

Get 10% off this product


Iceland Flags

R295
Buy Flags Online

The National flag of Iceland (Icelandic: íslenski fáninn) was officially described in Law No. 34, set out on 17 June 1944, the day Iceland became a republic.

Size
Quantity

All flags are ready for hoisting
• Fitted with rope and toggle
• 100% woven Polyester Bunting, (the real flag material)
• 98% ink strike-through mirror image on reverse side of flag
• Vibrant, long-lasting colours
  Free Delivery

For purchases over R1000 (RSA only)

  Flag Delivery

7 to 10 working days

  Digital (Instant) Downloads

Do not have a watermark

► Contact Us For A Custom Design

► Delivery Terms

The law is entitled “The Law of the National Flag of Icelanders and the State Arms” and describes the Icelandic flag as follows:

The civil national flag of Icelanders is blue as the sky with a snow-white cross, and a fiery-red cross inside the white cross. The arms of the cross extend to the edge of the flag, and their combined width is 2/9, but the red cross 1/9 of the combined width of the flag. The blue areas are right angled rectangles, the rectilinear surfaces are parallel and the outer rectilinear surfaces as wide as them, but twice the length. The dimensions between the width and length are 18:25.

Iceland’s first national flag was a white cross on a deep blue background. It was first shown in parade in 1897. The modern flag dates from 1915, when a red cross was inserted into the white cross of the original flag. This cross represents Christianity. It was adopted and became the national flag when Iceland gained independence from Denmark in 1918. For the Icelandic people the flag’s colouring represents a vision of their country’s landscape. The colours stand for 3 of the elements that make up the island. Red is the fire produced by the island’s volcanoes, white recalls the ice and snow that covers Iceland, and blue for the Atlantic Ocean.

The state flag (Tjúgufáni) differs from the civil one, that the outer rectangles are three times longer than the hoist side rectangles and split at the end, cut directly from the outer corners to its centre line. Cutting the inner edges of the outer rectangles at 4/7 of outer length and 3/7 of inner length of the outer rectangles. When this cut encounters the edge of the red cross it is cut vertically. Wikipedia

Data sheet

Material
100% Polyester Bunting (The Real Flag Material)
Finish
Fitted with rope and toggle ready for hoisting
Ceremonial Flags
Printed on a single panel, no joins
Type
National Flag