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Keywords: signal flag: nato | nato: signal flags | 
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These flags drawn them to correspond to US Navy specifications; other NATO
navies use slightly different proportions in some cases.
NATO also assigns different meanings to the letter flags and combinations of
letter flags and numeral flags and pennants than does the ICS,
but those meanings are classified.
Joe McMillan, 8 August 2003
I'm attaching a set if the NATO-signal flags. I started out adding the 
transparency indicated by grey areas, but I also reduced the palettes and set 
light grey as pen 0/background for each. The resulting files are also slightly 
smaller. 
I 
didn't touch the artwork, except that in one case I removed some stray black 
pixels. I did notice the rather dark green and blue. Is there any special reason 
for that? Does NATO specify these, or maybe the US Navy?
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 10 July 2010
Images by Joe McMillan, and revised by Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg.
|  One |  Two |  Three |  Four |  Five | 
|  Six |  Seven |  Eight |  Nine |  Zero | 
NATO use the three substitutes from the International Code
  and has a fourth 
substitute.
David Prothero, 07 January 2014
The whole ICSF set is white, yellow, red, blue, and black. If 4th  
follows the pattern, than 5th would probably have either red and/or  black, 
as the least used colours. After colour from the hoist, vertical  divided, 
horizontal divided, 4th is from the hoist again, so 5th would  be 
vertically divided. But each design is also different, so maybe a  dividing 
line like a <, with a black hoist and a yellow fly? Or is that too close to a 
different flag?
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 08 January 2014