THE ITALIANCHAM MAGAZINE VOL.13

Page 42

Talk of the Town

However, the flower production cost was eating up the donations, making it an issue for the practice. The fundraising activity therefore once again evolved, from selling paper flowers to paper flags. Corporates, which were entitled to specially designed paper flags, would usually show off the flags on their vehicles’ windscreens.

Flag Selling: Giving Back Like a Local The Editorial Board, ExplainerHK

Hong Kong has its very own way of charity fundraising. Instead of selling cookies, lemonade or offering car wash, most Hong Kong charities go for “flag-selling” on Saturday mornings. The “flag” is referring to a fingertip-sized paper sticker, not the flags flying on a pole. This paper sticker gives no economic value to the donors, but it illustrates the long history of charity fundraising in the city.

How it Started Back in the 1930s, Po Leung Kuk, one of the earliest local charities, started fundraising by selling paper flowers manually produced by their beneficiaries, who are mainly children and women. The paper flower was a successful launch. A typical selling day could raise about HK$8,000 which was equivalent to 74 times the average annual salary of a female worker at the time. 42 − Talk of the Town

The Evolution: From Paper Flowers to Flags As paper flowers became a popular fundraising practice among many charitable organizations in the 1950s, the production of labour-intensive paper flowers by the beneficiaries could no longer catch up with the high demand. Thus, charities started to commission factories to produce paper flowers. More types of flowers came to the market thanks to the professional workforce. The most basic flower was plum blossoms, folded in an ordinary plain textured paper. Institutions and socialites who donated a larger proportion may go for another more premium flower, which was usually roses folded in crepe paper.

While not everyone has a car, a spare pocket or a spare hand to show off a paper flag, some charities explored selling feathers instead of flags. Donors would receive a red chicken feather and they would pin it onto their clothes. Unfortunately, some donors complained about the possibility of getting injured by the pin. Eventually, adhesive flags became a common solution due to their low production costs, lightweight, and convenience to wear. The designs of the paper stickers could easily come in different shapes and colours. Having one of the customized charity stickers on your chest could perhaps help you get through a crowd of flag sellers for the rest of the day , saving their effort to ask for your donation.


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ItalianCham Magazine Vol. 13

1min
pages 1, 4

Past Events

5min
pages 57-62

What's on Hong Kong

7min
pages 52-55

Art, Culture & Lifestyle - Dante Alighieri Society Hong Kong

5min
pages 50-51

Art, Culture & Lifestyle - The Accademia Italiana della Cucina

5min
pages 48-49

Art, Culture & Lifestyle - Italian Cultural Institute in Hong Kong

8min
pages 44-47

Talk of the Town

4min
pages 42-43

Business Focus - Technogym

4min
pages 40-41

Business Focus - PwC

4min
pages 38-39

Philanthropy by IWA

6min
pages 34-36

Take a Coffee Break

1min
pages 32-33

Cover Story - Statrys

3min
page 30

Cover Story - METAGROUP

3min
pages 28-29

Cover Story - Tablo

4min
pages 26-27

Cover Story - Crown Worldwide Group

3min
pages 22-23

Cover Story - Generali

3min
pages 20-21

Cover Story - The Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong

4min
pages 18-19

Cover Story

4min
pages 16-17

Members' Spotlight - Ritail

4min
pages 14-15

Members' Spotlight - Pazta

4min
pages 12-13

Chamber's Spotlight

6min
pages 10-11

Chamber's Spotlight - Executive Committee 2021 - 2022

1min
pages 4, 9

Message from the Consul General

2min
pages 4, 7

President's Memo

2min
pages 4-5
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