Up in time for Riverfest: my flag at Riverside Park. |
A couple of weeks ago, I was asked to come up with a design for a flag! My artwork has often been about Southampton (see these drawings for a songbook); I love fitting local detail in and I'm all about activities on the water (even if I haven't participated in a while), so it was a perfect job for me. Plus a flag is a step up from bunting (see my hand-printed bunting for the mayor).
Ideas for the Itchen |
- a flag
- the S shape of the Itchen
- the bridges
- activities on the water
- the communities either side of the river
I tried a few things with layouts, borders and text. The bottom right one looked best, albeit without the area names and "Riverfest" and with colours to match Riverfest's existing graphics.
What to put where |
Now came the proper layout - what to put where; which of the various little drawings I had tried to fit in where. The colours were to be applied on the computer, so I drew in black but the green, yellow and pink had to be balanced right.
Here is the list of real things shown or at least represented.
In the river:
Dinghies, a barge, a rowing boat, kayakers, ageing hulks, swans and fish.
The pen drawing |
Kayaks, fenders, Woodmill, more hulks, a lifebelt on Cobden Bridge, the railway line, buoys, the marinas, the cycle path, the ancient Cross House, the willows of Riverside Park, the miniature railway, the strange castle house, the ruins of Roman Clausentum, a pear tree (for Peartree Green, up the hill), the Woolston Ferry (the "floating bridge" that was replaced by the Itchen Bridge in the 1970s), a rope and a chain (so nautical), gulls, a dog and a duck.
To the west:
The 1960s buildings of Southampton University (Maths and Faraday), City Gateway ("the fag butt"), one of the gasometers and St. Mary's Stadium, the mosque and churches (Highfield and St. Mary's (and St. Denys, which I now realise has no spire)) and various generic residential and business areas and parks.
To the east:
The clock tower at Bitterne Triangle (it was originally in the city centre), the Centurion industrial park, the new development at Woolston, the obelisk in Mayfield Park, the towers of Thornhill and Townhill Park and more churches (Ascension and Peartree) and other buildings of all sorts.
In the corners:
Oak, hawthorn, bracken and nettles.
BONUS INCLUSION FOR EAGLE-EYED SPOTTERS:
The flags in the wavy divides either side of the river spell out (as well as they can in only black and white) RIVERFEST and SOUTHAMPTON!
In full colour: the Riverfest flag ready to print |
The final image went off to the printers last week, to be put on a flag of six by four feet. Today I was glad to see how well it worked blown up from A4 size. The parks team came and put it up on the flag pole and here I am holding it!
Flying my flag |