
With June being Pride Month, you’ll likely see more people flying pride flags and companies incorporating pride colors into their products.
Although many of the pride flags that you’ll spot are the same, there are countless renditions that represent different communities and causes.
The original pride flag was designed by Gilbert Baker in 1978 and incorporated eight different colors that had different meanings: hot pink—sex, red—life, orange—healing, yellow—sunlight, green—nature, turquoise—magic/art, indigo—serenity, and violet—spirit, according to the Gilbert Baker Foundation.
In the years that followed, that original flag was altered for a variety of reasons. At one point, the hot-pink stripe was dropped because of fabric unavailability. And then in 1979, the flag went down to six colors, with indigo and turquoise being changed to just blue.
That six-striped flag continues to be the most synonymous with pride month and the LGBTQ+ community.
Jeff Chiu/AP
However, people in the community have continued to alter the flag and create their own banners entirely to better represent different groups of people.
For example, the transgender pride flag was designed by a transgender activist and veteran named Monica Helms in 1999, according to Northwestern University. It includes white, pink and light blue stripes.
Robin Rayne/AP
In 2017, the city of Philadelphia adopted a revised version of the traditional flag, adding black and brown stripes to the top to draw attention to the issues people of color face in the LGBTQ+ community.
Matt Slocum/AP
And in 2018, artist Daniel Quasar is credited with creating the progress pride flag. Northwestern says Quasar combined the traditional pride flag with the transgender pride flag and added black and brown stripes to represent marginalized LGBTQ+ communities of color, community members lost to HIV/AIDS, and those currently living with the disease.
Shutterstock
The progress flag has also been altered in many different ways, with some including other symbols over the stripes, like the Black Lives Matter fist symbol.
Wayne Parry/AP
Below are some examples of pride flags representing other LGBTQ+ groups:
Ally pride flag
Shutterstock
Aromantic flag
Shutterstock
Asexual flag
Shutterstock
Bear brotherhood flag
Shutterstock
Bisexual flag
Shutterstock
Demisexual pride flag
Shutterstock
Genderfluid flag
Shutterstock
Genderqueer flag
Shutterstock
Intersex flag
Shutterstock
Labrys lesbian pride flag
Shutterstock
Leather pride flag
Shutterstock
Lesbian pride flag
Shutterstock
Nonbinary flag
Shutterstock
Pansexual pride flag
Shutterstock
Polyamory flag
Shutterstock
Polysexual flag
Shutterstock
Rubber pride flag
Shutterstock





