Flag Features
60 square feet of 200D nylon — Arizona's sunburst at institutional scale, built for the poles that define county campuses, university approaches, and resort entrances
6×10 Ft Institutional Scale
At 60 square feet, the 6×10 bridges standard commercial installation and full monument scale — the right size for county courthouse poles, resort entrance drives, university flagpole rows, and large commercial campuses where Arizona's design must carry across an open approach without reaching monument-pole territory.
Heavyweight 200D Nylon
200-denier nylon is the benchmark for outdoor flagpole flags — tightly woven for tear resistance at the wind loads generated by a 60 sq ft panel, quick-drying after monsoon rain, and engineered to handle Arizona's sustained desert UV, thermal drafts, and seasonal high-wind events across a full outdoor service life.
Solid Brass Grommets
Two solid brass grommets set into the reinforced canvas header — upper and lower hoist edge. Brass is corrosion-resistant in Arizona's outdoor conditions and will not rust or transfer staining to pole hardware, snap hooks, or the canvas header fabric over seasons of outdoor installation.
Fade-Proof Arizona Colors
UV-rated inks formulated for the southwest sun — Arizona's desert receives among the highest annual UV doses in the US. The red, gold, copper, and blue of the 1917 Harris design stay vivid and sharp through full seasons of outdoor installation, resisting the color washout that standard inks show within months of southwest exposure.
Double-Sided Reverse Print
Arizona's design printed on the front face, with ink penetrating through the nylon to produce a natural mirror-image on the reverse. At 6×10 ft on an open-campus or plaza installation, both faces are visible from different approach angles — the reverse print displays Arizona's sunburst clearly from all vantage points around the pole.
Stitched Edges — Reinforced Fly Hem
All four edges finished with reinforced stitching. The free fly edge — the side that flutters and snaps in wind — receives double-stitched hem treatment to handle the repeated mechanical loading that institutional pole heights and Arizona's wind environment generate over a full outdoor service cycle.
Why Choose Us
The Right Size for Institutional Presence Without Monument Complexity
The 6×10 is the working size for Arizona's institutional landscape — the flag that flies at county courthouses, resort entrances, and university approaches without requiring a monument-pole installation or a dual attachment rigging system. Here's how it fits in the PromoPatriot Arizona range and how it compares to the alternatives at this scale.
Where the 6×10 Sits in the Arizona Flagpole Range
6×10 Ft · Large Institutional
- Pole height: 40–65 ft
- Two brass grommets — standard halyard snap hooks
- Two-person hoisting recommended
- 60 sq ft — county, university, resort, commercial
- Bi-annual inspection schedule
- Step up from 5×8; step down from 8×12
5×8 Ft (↓) · 8×12 Ft (↑)
- 5×8: poles 30–40 ft · 40 sq ft · brass grommets
- 5×8: large commercial, small institutional
- 8×12: poles 50–80 ft · 96 sq ft
- 8×12: rope thimble + grommet dual system
- 8×12: monument, state/civic ceremonial
- 8×12: two-person crew + quarterly inspection
| Feature | This 6×10 Ft Flag | Generic Large Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Nylon weight | 200D — correct weight for 40–65 ft institutional flying | 100D or 150D — undersized for this scale and wind load |
| Grommet material | Solid brass — no rust, no staining on pole hardware | Iron or zinc — corrodes in outdoor Arizona conditions |
| Fly hem finishing | Double-stitched fly hem — built for sustained desert wind loads | Single-stitched — frays at the edges within one season |
| Color durability | Fade-proof UV-rated inks — built for Arizona's sun | Standard inks — visibly faded within 3–4 months of southwest sun |
| Print construction | Double-sided reverse — both faces show Arizona's design | Single-sided — reverse blank or nearly invisible |
| Design accuracy | Official 1917 Harris design — correct proportions and ray count | Incorrect sunbeam count or oversized/undersized copper star common |
| Header construction | Reinforced canvas header — withstands institutional halyard tension | Standard header — tears at grommet holes under sustained load |
30-Day Satisfaction Guarantee
Return within 30 days for a full refund. Manufacturing defects in fabric, stitching, or grommets replaced free.
Official 1917 Arizona Design
Captain Harris's design faithfully reproduced — correct thirteen-ray count, copper star, and blue field proportions.
Institutional Ordering
Multi-flag orders for county campuses, resort arrays, and universities — bulk pricing and PO billing available.
Reinforced Packaging
Reinforced box protects hardware and fabric on the 6×10 — arrives ready to hoist.
Care & Maintenance
Inspection, cleaning, and service guidance for the 6×10 institutional installation
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Bi-Annual Inspection
Lower the flag fully at 30 days post-installation for a first inspection, then every six months thereafter. Examine both brass grommets for loosening, deformation, or fabric tearing around the hole; check the canvas header for stitching separation; and inspect the fly hem for fraying or thread breaks. Address wear indicators before rehoisting rather than waiting for failure at height.
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Seasonal Washing
Machine wash cold on a gentle cycle with mild detergent at the start of each season and after prolonged dust storm or monsoon exposure. No bleach, no high heat. Air dry fully flat before rehoisting — a wet 6×10 nylon flag adds significant weight to the halyard load and places unnecessary stress on the grommet attachments at ascent.
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Monsoon & Wind Event Protocol
Arizona's monsoon season (June–September) brings sudden high-velocity gusts, haboob conditions, and embedded thunderstorm winds that can exceed 50 mph. Consider lowering the flag before forecast severe events and inspecting grommets and the canvas header immediately afterward. Post-monsoon inspection is the most important mid-season check — this is when grommet fabric tearing and header stitching separation are most likely to appear.
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Halyard Condition Matters
The most common cause of flag loss and hardware damage at institutional installations is a degraded halyard — not flag failure. At 40–65 ft, a frayed or UV-weakened rope can part under the load of a 60 sq ft flag in wind, dropping the flag and potentially damaging the snap hooks and grommets on impact. Include halyard inspection in every flag inspection cycle, and replace the halyard at the first sign of core wear, significant fraying, or UV stiffening.
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Service Life & Replacement
Under normal Arizona outdoor flying at the 40–65 ft institutional range — full UV exposure, seasonal monsoon, and typical desert thermal wind — a 200D nylon flag at this scale typically delivers 18–24 months of service before fly hem fraying, color shift, or fabric thinning at the hoist edge warrants replacement. Institutional properties commonly carry a spare flag in storage so the pole is never bare when the service flag is lowered for maintenance or replacement.
Flagpole too tall for a 6×10? The PromoPatriot Arizona 8×12 Ft with rope thimble and brass grommet dual attachment is the correct step up for poles 65 ft and above — monument and civic ceremonial scale. Need a smaller size? The Arizona 5×8 Ft is sized for 30–40 ft poles.
Shop Full Arizona Flagpole Flag Range →Flying surface — 4× the area of a standard 3×5, sized for institutional pole heights
Recommended range — county campuses, universities, resorts, large commercial
Solid brass, upper and lower hoist — corrosion-resistant, snap hook compatible
Captain Charles W. Harris's design — 13 sunbeams, copper star — unchanged since adoption
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about the PromoPatriot Arizona State Flag 6×10 Ft
The standard sizing proportion used by flag professionals is that the flag's fly length — the long dimension — should be approximately one-quarter of the pole height. The 6×10 has a 10-foot fly, which makes the ideal pole height 40 ft. The flag looks proportional and carries strong visual weight on poles from 40 ft up to about 55–60 ft. At 65 ft it remains usable but begins to appear slightly undersized relative to the pole. Below 40 ft, the 6×10 will appear oversized — the 5×8 (30–40 ft poles) or 4×6 (20–30 ft poles) are the correct steps down. Above 65 ft, the 8×12 with the rope thimble and brass grommet dual attachment system is the right choice. If your pole is right at the 60–65 ft boundary, the 8×12 will read better on a primary civic or ceremonial installation; the 6×10 is the better choice for commercial or hospitality properties at that height where the scale emphasis of a full monument flag isn't required.
Both attachment systems use brass hardware, but they distribute load differently. The 6×10 uses two solid brass grommets — metal rings set into the reinforced canvas header at the upper and lower hoist edge. The halyard's snap hooks attach directly to these grommets, which hold securely under the loads generated by hoisting and flying a 60 sq ft flag at 40–65 ft. The 8×12 introduces a rope thimble at the top hoist edge because at 96 sq ft on a 50–80 ft pole, the halyard forces involved in hoisting are significantly greater — enough that concentrating all that load through a grommet hole becomes the structural weak point. The thimble loop distributes hoist load across the full width of the reinforced header rather than at a single hole. At the 6×10 size and 40–65 ft pole range, standard brass grommets handle the loads appropriately — the rope thimble becomes necessary at 8×12 and above.
Two-person hoisting is a strong recommendation rather than an absolute requirement, but there's a practical reason for it at this size. A 6×10 nylon flag has enough surface area that in any breeze — even a light one — it will catch air and become a difficult one-person operation to manage while simultaneously controlling the halyard. The common failure mode for solo hoisting at this size is the flag body wrapping around the pole shaft during ascent: one hand on the halyard, the other trying to keep the flag clear isn't reliable at 40+ ft. With two people, one controls the halyard at the cleat and manages the ascent pace, while the second holds the flag body clear of the pole and any truck hardware as it rises. The hoist goes cleanly, the flag reaches full staff undamaged, and neither person is managing too many things at once. On calm, windless mornings, an experienced solo operator can manage a 6×10 hoist, but two people is the consistently reliable approach.
Arizona presents three climate factors that accelerate flag wear faster than most other states. First, UV intensity: Arizona's low-humidity desert air provides very little atmospheric UV filtering, and the state consistently records the highest UV indices in the continental US — particularly in southern Arizona. This is why the fade-proof UV-rated inks on this flag matter more here than they would on a flag installed in Minnesota or Oregon. Standard inks can show significant color shift in Arizona within a single summer season. Second, monsoon wind loads: the Arizona monsoon (June through September) brings sudden, brief, high-velocity gust events — haboob conditions can embed 50+ mph gusts with minimal warning. The flag's double-stitched fly hem is designed specifically to handle these peak-load events. Third, thermal cycling: Arizona's large daily temperature swings in dry air cause the nylon to expand and contract more than in humid climates, gradually fatiguing fly hem stitching over time. The bi-annual inspection schedule accounts for this — catching hem wear before it progresses to fraying.
The front face displays Arizona's official design in its correct orientation: the copper star at center, thirteen alternating red and gold sunbeams radiating across the upper half, and the blue field across the lower half, with all elements in their standard left-to-right reading position. The reverse face shows a natural mirror-image of the same design — the same copper star, the same sunburst pattern, but reflected left-to-right as if you were looking at the front through the fabric. At 6×10 ft on an open-campus or plaza installation where the flag is visible from both sides of the pole, both faces clearly display Arizona's sunburst design in full color. The mirror-image reverse is immediately recognizable as the Arizona flag from either approach direction. This is the standard construction for flagpole flags at this size, and it is distinct from a fully double-sided flag (where two separate panels are stitched together with an opaque blocking layer between them) — the reverse bleed-through achieves practical visibility on both faces at a lower price point appropriate for institutional replacement cycles.
Under normal Arizona outdoor flying conditions at the 40–65 ft institutional range, a quality 200D nylon flag typically delivers 18–24 months of service before the combination of fly hem fraying, color fading, and fabric thinning at the hoist edge makes replacement appropriate. The bi-annual inspection schedule exists to identify the wear indicators — hem fraying, header stitching loosening, grommet-area fabric thinning — before they become structural failures at height. In practice, most institutional properties operating a formal flag maintenance program replace the service flag when inspection shows sustained hem fraying beyond 2–3 inches, noticeable color fading visible from the normal viewing distance of the installation, or any deformation or loosening at the grommet attachments. Carrying a spare flag in storage means the pole is never bare during the replacement cycle — the worn flag comes down at inspection, the spare goes up immediately, and a replacement order is placed for the next cycle.
The 6×10 is rated for indoor use, but it is important to match the flag size to the installation space. At 6×10 ft, this flag is a large panel — appropriate for display in a full-size gymnasium, a large civic auditorium, a sports arena concourse, or a high-ceiling institutional lobby. In a standard office lobby, council chamber, or smaller ceremonial space, the 6×10 will be oversized and difficult to display effectively from a floor-standing indoor flagpole. For indoor desk or floor-standing display at standard institutional room scales — conference rooms, offices, courtrooms, and school gymnasiums — the 3×5 ft with standard brass grommets is the conventional indoor flag size. The 4×6 ft works for larger lobbies and light-commercial indoor display. The 6×10 and above are primarily outdoor sizes that can be used in very large indoor spaces such as sports venues and auditoriums.
Standard orders: return within 30 days in original, unused condition for a full refund — prepaid return label provided, no questions asked. Manufacturing defects in fabric, stitching, or brass grommets are replaced free within 30 days of receipt with no return shipping required on defective items. For institutional buyers — county agencies, universities, resort management companies, corporate facilities teams — placing multi-flag orders or needing coordinated delivery dates and purchase order billing, contact us before ordering to establish account terms. Normal wear from outdoor installation and flying is not a manufacturing defect; the bi-annual inspection schedule is the correct service framework for institutional installations, and replacement flags should be ordered on wear indicators rather than waiting for failure at height.














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