
The flag of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon is a very interesting and complicated flag. Obviously, the five tribal designs represent the country's traditional heritage, while the five stars stand for the five regions of the nation. Orange, white, red, and green can be found in the tribal designs, with a white crescent moon encompassing five white five-pointed stars on the field of green to the right of the stripe, near the top of the flag. This stripe is primarily red, with five tribal patterns that are used in designing the traditional rugs the country is known for. The flag is primarily green, but with a wide vertical stripe near the left end of the flag. It does have the honor of being the most intricate of all the national flags in the world. The colors and the Y design are meant to represent the convergence of two separate paths: those of the South Africans, and those of the Europeans who colonized the country.Īlthough with four colors in its design, Turkmenistan's flag is far from having the most colors. On the right side of the flag, the area above the Y is red, and the area below is blue, both with a white border. The triangular shape along the leftmost end of the flag is black with a yellow border.

The flag's design is made up of a green horizontal Y, positioned so that the Y touches both the upper and lower left corners of the flag. As the only nation to use six colors in their flag's primary design, South Africa gets first place on our list of the world's most colorful flags.
