All of our Mexican national flags are manufactured in house at our head office in Cambridgeshire, allowing us to ensure that all of our Mexican flags are made to the highest standard and quality. We have bespoke options for our Mexican flags, allowing you to choose the size and finishing options, making sure that your Mexican flag meets your unique requirements.
We have a highly skilled in-house sewing team who produce all of our sewn flags, ensuring our national flags are of the highest quality. They use Ministry of Defence approved material so that the flag is of the highest quality.
Our printed Mexican l flags are also made from Spun Polyester, ensuring that they are made to the same high standard as our sewn flags. Spun Polyester is more durable than our standard 155gsm Knitted Polyester and is one of our highest quality flag materials. All of our printed Mexican flags feature crisp designs and vivid colours, making sure they stand out and look prestigious for any display. Use alongside our GRP flagpoles for a high-quality display that is high quality and durable.
Our Mexican flags are produced in house at our head office in Cambridgeshire. We make sure we manufacture all of our Mexican flags to the highest standard, adhering to all flag regulations. Our printed and sewn Mexico flags are finished with rope and toggle as standard.
If you are looking for another bespoke Mexican flag in a different size or using a different material then please don't hesitate to contact us and we will be able to produce it for you.
The Mexican flag has been in existence since 1821, the design has only once been revised in 1968, but since then the flag of Mexico has not changed.
The Mexican flag features the Mexican Coat of Arms, an eagle holding a snake above Oak and Laurel bushes tied together with ribbon. According to Aztec legend people were told to settle in the place where they saw an eagle sat on a ‘Nopal’ cactus eating a snake. This happened on an island in Lake Texcoco, where they settled and founded a city called Tenochtitlan, which is now where the capital of Mexico, Mexico City, is.
The colours green, white and red also have special symbolism. Green is said to represent independence, white for the purity of religion and chastity and red refers to the blood union of local ethnic groups, including Spanish and Indian.