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Paroisse de Plessisville, Quebec (Canada)

L'Érable RCM, Centre du Québec

Last modified: 2022-04-02 by rob raeside
Keywords: plessisville | quebec |
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[Paroisse de Plessisville flag] image located by Dave Fowler, 1 March 2022
based on photo

See also:


Description of the flag

Flag is a logo on white.
Dave Fowler, 1 March 2022

The parish municipality of Plessisville was established on 1 July 1855, as the canton municipality of Somerset-Sud. It completely surrounds the village municipality of Plessisville, which was established on 27 April 1855 and transformed into a town on 10 February 1955.
The parish municipality of Plessisville adopted the same name as the town it surrounds in 1946.

https://www.paroisseplessisville.com
Municipal website

Plessisville is named for Joseph-Octave Plessis (1763-1825), Bishop (1806), then Archbishop (1819-1825) of Quebec.

http://www.biographi.ca/fr/bio/plessis_joseph_octave_6F.html
Dictionnaire biographique du Canada

Flag is a logo on white.
The identity of the parish of Plessisville is defined around four poles: the citizen and his family, business, agriculture, and leisure and community.

The municipality's geography is illustrated by a scattered lozenge synthesizing the somewhat irregular shape of the territory. The lozenge is composed of four sectors made of square units and diversified rectangles, which represent both unity and group. Each sector is identified by a color: red, a symbol of emotion, identifies the citizen and his family; green represents agriculture, smaller and bigger farms, as well; yellow, the sun's bright color, is associated with leisure and community; navy blue, a synonym of prestige and seriousness, illustrates business, smaller and bigger companies, as well.

Blue is also used for the intricate "P" of "Paroisse de Plessisville" and for the baseline. The "double P" is framed in a square space suggesting structure and organization. The typography, chosen as legible and modern, was adapted to the logo's construction lines. The typeface is Geomanist, designed by Atipo.

For general perception, in compliance with the baseline, no space is closed. Circulation is made possible through any element. When the logo is identified to any of the four sectors, it rotates like windmill toys so that the matching color is placed in the lower part, close to the baseline.

The colors are prescribed as:

Blue
Pantone 7698C - 7706U
CMYK 88 - 51 - 32 - 9
RGB 28 - 105 - 135
Hex #1c6987

Red
Pantone 7417C - 7417U
CMYK 1 - 83 - 85 - 9
RGB 238 - 82 - 56
Hex #ce5238

Green
Pantone 383C - 583U
CMYK 42 - 14 - 100 - 0
RGB 162 - 181 - 38
Hex #a2b526

Yellow
Pantone 143C - 129U
CMYK 0 - 32 - 88 - 0
RGB 252 - 181 - 59

The flag in actual use does not match the prescribed one, which is white, in dimensions 35" x 72", charged with a big version of the logo, without writing.

https://www.paroisseplessisville.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Guide_normes_graphiques_Paroisse_Plessisville.pdf
Guide de normes graphiques
 
Ivan Sache, 1 March 2022