Bisexual
10 Facts You Never Knew About the Bisexual Flag
10 Facts You Never Knew About the Bisexual Flag

It's not all about rainbows!
ZacharyZane_
September 17 2023 8:46 AM EST
September 23 2023 4:11 AM EST
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10 Facts You Never Knew About the Bisexual Flag
It's not all about rainbows!
BOOM! There she is. The bisexual pride flag in all of her glory. Here are all the deets you need to know about it.
Who knew?
He noticed the majority of Bi+ people felt less connection to the rainbow Pride flag and wanted to create a flag with symbols all Bi+ people could rally around.
Bisexual flag colors
Page used two overlapping triangles as a symbol of bisexuality and pride.
These biangles were designed by Liz Nania as she was helping to organize the first national bisexual contingent for the 1987 March on Washington, according to Los Angeles-based art historian Andrew Campbell, author of Queer x Design. He told Deezen that "they are a powerful expression of the cleverness of LGBTQ design. The design takes the triangle as a starting point. The pink triangle was used by the Nazis during world war two to mark male homosexuals. Lesbians were categorized with a black triangle with other 'asocials' such as sex workers and 'nonconformists.' Nania overlapped pink and blue triangles, each representative of a pole of the normative gender binary. The space of their overlap is a deep purple, made from the combination of pink and blue. This overlap communicates an inclusivity in terms of the potentially adored – playing with powerful LGBTQ symbology." Later, it became the foundation for a Page's Bi+ Pride flag.
The top 40 percent of the flag is pink, the middle 20 percent is purple, and the bottom 40 percent is blue. The various colors represent attraction to multiple genders. The pink alludes to the pink triangles, which was later adopted by AIDS activist group ACT UP as a badge of solidarity and pride in the 1980s. The purple was an allusion to "purple menace" (or "lavender menace") another slang term for bi+ folks. And the blue was added both because it reflects multiple genders overlapping, but also, says bi+ activist Cynthia Connors, "because it makes the flag, and the original biangles the colors came from, a bit of a joke on the gender binary. And the Bi+ community has never been able to resist a pun or a joke."
Which makes it just over 24 years old.
Let your Bi+ flag fly.
\u201ci was today years old when i figured out the bisexual flag is magenta and blue on the outside, and those colours mixed make purple\u201d— cat! (@cat!) 1669717928
\u201cmontero, lil nas x - bisexual flag\n\nrequested by @bxysgirl\u201d— gay albums \ud83d\udca5 (@gay albums \ud83d\udca5) 1669376098
\u201cremembering when hobi did a heart to a bisexual flag and then they put it in the ptd movie :')\u201d— bisexual armys (@bisexual armys) 1668987596
Currently, no bi flag is available in the Unicode, but that may not be the case forever. In 2020 Tanner Marino, an advocate and software engineer, proposed to the Unicode Consortium to request the creation of a bisexual flag. Sadly it was rejected, but he has kept the hope alive with his #MorePrideEmojis campaign. Want to help out? Sign the petition use the #BiFlagEmoji and post the above image.
The pink symbolizes male homosexuals, a reference to the Nazis use of it during the war. The black triangle symbolizes lesbian relationships. The purple is meant to be a combination of pink and blue referencing both genders.
The pink color represents represents same sex attraction, the blue represents straight sexual attraction and the purple represents both, which makes it the most bisexual color.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
The purple stripe, the resulting "overlap" of the blue and magenta stripes, represents attraction regardless of sex or gender.
Three horizontal bars with 2/5th colored pink, 1/5th purple, and 2/5th blue. It has a proportion of 3:5.
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Zachary Zane is a writer, YouTube influencer, and activist whose work focuses on (bi)sexuality, gender, dating, relationships, and identity politics. Check out his YouTube channel here.
Zachary Zane is a writer, YouTube influencer, and activist whose work focuses on (bi)sexuality, gender, dating, relationships, and identity politics. Check out his YouTube channel here.
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