Pride Flags

Here you will find the pride flags! Each one has a picture of the flag and a little bit of information about it.

Traditional Pride Flag

This is the flag everyone is most familiar with.

Gilbert Baker Pride Flag

This flag was created by Gilbert Baker, a gay rights activist and an American artist. It was first revealed at the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Freedom Day Parade on June 25, 1978. The pink represents sex, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sun, green for nature, turquoise for magic, blue for serenity, and purple for spirit.

Lesbian Pride Flag

Famously known as the official lesbian flag. The flag contains different shades of pink, orange, white, and red.

Transgender Pride Flag

This flag was created in 1999 by Monica Helms who was an openly transgender woman. The blue and pink stripes are the colors associated with baby boys and baby girls. The white stripe represents those who identify as intersex or are transitioning.

Genderqueer Pride Flag

This flag was originated from a genderqueer writer and activist Marilyn Roxie in 2011. The lavender represents androgyny as it blends together pink and blue. The white stripe is also like the white stripe in the transgender flag representing neutral identities. The final color, chartreuse represents the third gender and people who don't fall into the binary of gender.

More Colour, More Pride Flag

This flag is to better represent people of colour in the LGBTQ+ community. It was created by Philadelphia- based campaign group More Colour More Pride in 2017.

Genderfluid Pride Flag

These five stripes stand for gender fluidity and the genderfluid community. This flag was created by JJ Poole. The five colors represent the different aspects of gender. Pink is for femininity, blue for masculinity, purple for both femininity and masculinity, black for lack of gender, and white for all genders.

Non-Binary Pride Flag

The non-binary pride flag was created by a 17-year-old by the name of Kye Rowan in 2014. The flag contains four colors: yellow to represent those whose gender exists outside of the binary, white for those who have many or all genders, purple for those who consider their gender a mix of both female and male, and black to represent the people who don't feel an attachment to any gender.

Bisexual Pride Flag

Created by Micheal Page, an LGBTQ+ activist in 1998, this flag is used to give bisexuals their own symbol and to increase visibility in the community as a whole and within society. The flag includes three colors: magenta, which represents same-sex attraction; blue, which represents heterosexual attraction; and lavender, a mixture of magenta and blue which represents attraction to both sexes.

Pansexual Pride Flag

This flag consists of three stripes to symbolize pansexuality as an attraction to a person regardless of gender, or an attraction to all genders. The blue represents an attraction to men, pink to women, and yellow to people who don't fit within the gender binary.

Progress Pride Flag

The original pride flag was updated once again in 2018 by Daniel Quasar. The new design of the flag was to better represent the trans community, queer people of color, and to honor the lives of those who died due to AIDS complications.

Asexual

This flag contains four colors. The black represents asexuality, the grey represents grey-asexuals and demisexuals, the white represents allies, and the purple represents community. The flag was created in August of 2020 by Asexual Visibility and Education Network to create a symbol for asexual people.

Polysexual Pride Flag

In 2012 this flag was created by Samlin. This flag, similar to the bisexual and pansexual flag, includes three colors: pink, which stands for attraction to women; blue, attraction to men; and green, attraction to those who identify as non-binary.

Intersex Pride Flag

This flag was created in 2013 by Morgan Carpenter. The flag's two main colors are yellow and purple because they are often considered to be the most gender neutral. Carpenter said: "The circle is unbroken and un-ornamented, symbolizing wholeness and completeness and our potentialities. ."

Polyamory Pride Flag

This flag was designed by Jim Evans in 1995. It includes three colors: red, black, and blue, as well as the Greek letter pi. Red stands for love and passion, black for solidarity with those who keep their polyamorous relationships from the outside world, and blue for honesty and openness among partners. Pi was chosen as the mathematical constant is a an irrational number and its decimal representation never ends.

Demisexual Pride Flag

The origin of this flag is unknown, however, the colors are considered to represent asexuality (black), demisexuality (grey), sexuality (white), and community (purple).

Agender Pride Flag

This seven striped flag came into play in 2014 by Salem X. They included black and white stripes to represent a lack of gender, the grey for semi-genderlessness, and the green stripe for non-binary genders.

Aromantic Pride Flag

This flag includes five stripes. Dark green and light green represent the spectrum of aromantic identities, white representing friendship, and grey and black representing the spectrum of sexual identities in the aromantic community.

Progress Pride Flag 2021

The Progress Pride flag got updated to include intersex people. It was designed by Valentino Vecchietti, an Intersex Columnist.