
Why The Stars Are Red with White Edges
More details of the history surrounding the red and white stars are given below.
The white edges (called fimbrillation) were necessary in order to make the letters or stars stand out clearly from the blue background. But they also allowed the badge to echo the colours of the Union Jack. This probably pleased the colonial patriots who, certainly in the 1800s and even up until the 1940s, considered New Zealand a new Britain and very much part of the Empire.
The Star Fern Flag is intended to be a bridge of peace between New Zealanders of different ethnicities. For someone of British ancestry (like the writer, some generations back) it is not a small thing to lose the Union Jack on the corner of the flag because it speaks of my heritage. However the loss is eased by the fact that the stars are a specific echo that flag, but brought into a South Pacific context.