National Flags of the World With Clients’ Comments

by Scott Beale on September 20, 2007 · 1 comment

great-britain-flag-smooth.jpg

The Presurfer has unearthed a blog post by Advertising/Design Goodness from last year that features a great flash animation by Clayborn Creative Consulting showing how flags might have changed if their clients were able to comment on the design process in order to improve the marketing of their country.

Here Are A Few Related Posts You Might Enjoy:

Testing Disqus For Laughing Squid Comments

FriendFeed Comments on Laughing Squid

Backtype, Helping You Track & Search Comments

Flags Made Out of Food, Clever Advertising for the Sydney International Food Festival

Exploring the Tenderloin National Forest

filed under Uncategorized

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

1 MichaeLyons September 25, 2007 at 4:24 pm

Don’t you love how they get the number of stars in the US flag wrong!

Reply

Leave a Comment

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Moderation: All comments are manually approved, so if your comment is approved it may take a while for your comment to appear on this blog post.

Irrelevant, obnoxious, trolling, abusive and spam comments will not be approved. Let's keep things civil and on topic. Basically what we are saying, if your comment does not add to the conversation, it will not be approved.

Real Name & Website: For the most part do not post anonymous comments. Please list your real name and provide a link to your website, blog, Twitter account, etc. You know who we are, so we ask the same of you.

Corrections: If you want to point out a typo or correction, please email us instead. Typo or correction comments will not be approved since they are pretty much useless once they are corrected and then only tend to confuse things.

Gravatars: If you would like a Gravatar to show up with your comment? Just sign-up for an account and any comment with your email address will display your Gravatar.

Previous post: Subscribe To Laughing Squid Via Email

Next post: Stephen Hawking Talks About The Simpsons