Blue gay pride flag
Agender Pride Flag
The Agender Pride Flag was designed in by Salem X. The black and pale stripes represent an absence of gender, the gray stripes represent semi-genderless, and the green stripe represents nonbinary genders.
Aromantic Event Flag
The Aromantic Identity festival flag was created by a Tumblr user known as "cameronwhimsy" in The green stripes represent the spectrum of aromantic individuals because the color green is on the contrary side of the color wheel from red (which is typically associated with romance). white represents platonic relationships and gray and jet represents those of other sexualities.
Asexual Identity festival Flag
The asexual celebration flag was created by a member of the Asexual Representation and Education Network in August of as a part of a society effort to construct and choose a flag. Each stripe has a diverse meaning: black represents asexuality, gray means gray-sexuality and demisexuality, white stands for non asexual partners and allies, and purple represents community.
Bisexual Pride Flag
Michael Page introduced the Bisexu
Pride Flags
Flags are often used as symbols of identity. It is no surprise then that numerous self-acceptance flags have been created to represent the sexual and gender diversity of 2SLGBTQIA+ communities. Explore all the different flags and their meanings.
Interested in exploring further? Take the online Positive Space: Foundations course to learn more about sex, sexuality, and gender diversity.
This resource is not intended to provide an exhaustive list of celebration flags. If you acquire a suggestion for a flag to add or have any feedback on the information provided, please contact us.
Achillean Flag
Achillean: Men or men-aligned individuals who are attracted to other men and men-aligned people. It is sometimes acknowledged as men loving men (MLM). Achillean individuals may or may not be attracted to other genders. While this label isn’t exclusive, it is used to unify men-aligned people or men who devote other men.
Date:
Creator: Redesigned by DeviantArt (Tumblr user)
Flag meaning: The first iteration was created by pridenpositivity (Tumblr user). The flag contains the color bluFlags of the LGBTIQ Group
Flags have always been an integral part of the LGBTIQ+ movement. They are a observable representation meant to celebrate progress, advocate for representation, and strengthen the demand and drive for collective action. There have been many LGBTIQ+ flags over the years. Some have evolved, while others are constantly being conceptualized and created.
Rainbow Flag
Created in by Gilbert Baker, the iconic Celebration Rainbow flag originally had eight stripes. The colors included pink to represent sexuality, red for healing, yellow for sun, emerald for serenity with nature, turquoise for art, indigo for peace, and violet for spirit. In the years since, the flag now has six colors. It no longer has a pink stripe, and the turquoise and indigo stripes were replaced with royal blue.
Progress Pride Flag
Created in by nonbinary artist Daniel Quasar, the Progress Pride flag is based on the iconic rainbow flag. With stripes of black and brown to portray marginalized LGBTIQ+ people of paint and the triad of azure, pink, and white from the trans flag, the desig
The Progress Pride flag was developed in by neutrois American artist and artist Daniel Quasar (who uses xe/xyr pronouns). Based on the iconic rainbow flag from , the redesign celebrates the diversity of the LGBTQ community and calls for a more inclusive society. In , the V&A acquired a bespoke applique version of the Progress Pride flag that can be seen on display in the Design – Now gallery.
'Progress' is a reinterpretation of multiple iterations of the pride flag. The imaginative 'rainbow flag' was created by Gilbert Baker in to celebrate members of the gay and queer woman political movement. It comprised eight coloured stripes stacked on top of each other to evoke a rainbow, a symbol of hope. Baker assigned a specific meaning to each colour: pink for sex, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sunlight, green for world, turquoise for magic, indigo for serenity and violet for spirit. A year later the pink and turquoise stripes were dropped owing to a shortage of pink fabric at the time and legibility concerns, resulting in the six-colour rainbow flag most commo