"Cuban flag patch. Large 6" x 8"
A 6" x 8" embroidered Cuban flag patch — the kind that ends up sewn onto a denim jacket, a backpack heading to college, or a guayabera worn to a rally on Calle Ocho. Stitched in the familiar blue stripes, white triangle, and lone star.
The size matters here. At six by eight inches, this is a statement patch — visible across a room, large enough to anchor the back of a jacket or center a display banner. Not the small lapel version.
Common Uses: Sewing or ironing onto jackets, vests, backpacks, and tote bags; mounting in shadow boxes; displayed at Cuban Independence Day gatherings on May 20th; included in care packages to family abroad; pinned to bulletin boards in dorm rooms and offices.
Cultural Context: For many in the Cuban diaspora, the flag isn't decorative — it's declarative. It shows up at quinceañeras, graduations, and family reunions, and gets passed down between generations who've never set foot on the island but carry it anyway. A patch this size is meant to be seen.
Pairs With: Cuban-themed apparel, Calle Ocho festival outfits, dorm care packages, and gifts for relatives marking citizenship milestones or family reunions.
Ships nationwide to Cuban-American households from Hialeah to the Northeast diaspora — wherever the flag still means something.