The Meaning Behind the LGBTQIA+ Flags: Colors of Pride, Love, and Freedom
Diversity has its own language, and often, that language is written in color.
The LGBTQIA+ flags are more than symbols. They’re declarations of presence, celebrations of identity, and reminders that visibility itself is an act of resistance.
Let's explore the meanings behind some of the most recognized flags across the community.
The Pride Flag
The most iconic of them all.
The current version features six horizontal stripes, each representing a core value:
Red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sunlight, green for nature, blue for harmony, and violet for spirit.
Created by Gilbert Baker in 1978 as a tribute to freedom and love in all its forms, the Pride flag has since become a universal emblem of visibility, celebration, and respect.
The Bisexual Flag
Three colors, three expressions of love.
Pink represents attraction to the same gender, blue to different genders, and purple—the blend of both—symbolizes connection across all forms of attraction.
Designed by Michael Page in 1998, it sought to give visibility to a community often left unseen.

The Transgender Flag
Created by Monica Helms in 1999, this flag consists of five stripes: two blue (masculine), two pink (feminine), and one white in the center, representing those who are transitioning or identify outside the binary.
No matter how you display it, the design is always “correct”: a symbol that every identity is valid.
The Non-Binary Flag
Designed by Kye Rowan in 2014, this flag honors identities that exist beyond the traditional binary.
Yellow represents those who don’t identify with any gender, white for multiple genders, purple for a blend of masculine and feminine, and black for those who feel no connection to gender at all.
The Intersex Flag
Minimalist and powerful.
A purple circle on a yellow background stands for integrity and the right to self-determination.
Created in 2013 by Morgan Carpenter and Intersex Human Rights Australia, it calls for respect for intersex bodies, choices, and autonomy, free from medical or social imposition.
The Asexual Flag
A representation of those who experience little or no sexual attraction.
Its colors reflect a spectrum:
Black for asexuality, gray for the gray area in between, white for sexuality as a whole, and purple for community.
The flag was chosen by consensus within the asexual movement in 2010.
The Pansexual Flag
Three horizontal stripes, one clear message: love has no gender.
Pink represents attraction to women, blue to men, and yellow to non-binary people.
The Leather (BDSM) Flag
Designed in 1989 by Tony DeBlase, this flag honors the leather and BDSM communities.
It features blue, black, and white stripes, with a red heart in the upper left corner.
Beyond sexuality, it symbolizes trust, respect, and freedom—the foundation of every consensual expression of desire.
The Bear Community Flag
Created by Craig Byrnes, it combines stripes in shades of brown, amber, gold, white, gray, and black, along with a bear paw print.
It celebrates the diversity of bodies, ages, and masculinities within the gay community.
The Progress Pride Flag
The newest evolution of Pride.
Designed by Daniel Quasar in 2018, it merges the traditional rainbow with a forward-pointing chevron in pink, blue, and white (representing the trans community) and brown and black (honoring racialized people and those living with HIV).
It’s a reminder that Pride is not just about celebration: it’s about progress and justice.
Every flag carries a story, a voice, and a struggle.
Their colors don’t just represent identities; they reflect the ongoing path toward equality, freedom, and the right to simply be.
At SVAKOM, we believe that pleasure begins with authenticity, celebrating who we are and who we love, fearlessly, without labels, and with all the color in the world.
















