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Gay Pride/Rainbow Flag - Variations with order and number of stripes (1)
Sexual Orientation Flags
Last modified: 2024-09-21 by randy young
Keywords: rainbow flag | stripes: 5 | stripes: 6 |
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image by Tomislav Todorović, 26 June 2015
At least one of the flags seen in Mumbai, India, on 16 August 2009 did replace red and orange stripes with a single orange-red stripe, while keeping the unusual order of other colors, as shown here. The reason for this is unclear, since the usual six-striped rainbow flag is not unknown in India, as some of the above sources reveal.
Tomislav Todorović, 26 June 2015
image by Tomislav Todorović, 25 August 2018
Another variant with five stripes omits the violet stripe, while the order of others remains unchanged, with blue (lighter than usual) at the top and red at the bottom. This flag was used at the 6th Kerala Queer Pride, which took place at Thiruvananthapuram on 11 July 2015. The photo of this flag can be found here. Another photo, which gives only an incomplete view, can be found here.
Tomislav Todorović, 25 August 2018
image by Tomislav Todorović, 23 August 2019
A version with five stripes arranged vertically was used in Australia, at the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Parade, on 7 March 2015: https://www.shutterstock.com/editorial/image-editorial/sydney-gay-and-lesbian-mardi-gras-parade-australia-07-mar-2015-4510138c. There, the orange stripe was omitted, while the other colors remained in unchanged order, with purple at the hoist and red at the fly. Most of colors were in rather dark shades, yellow and red being particularly conspicuous in that regard.
Tomislav Todorović, 23 August 2019
image by Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
Gay Pride flags sometimes have the rainbow colors in "unordered" pattern - that is, not following the order in which they naturally appear within the rainbow. One of the best known examples is from the
Madrid Pride 2008. The pattern (top-down) is: blue, violet, red, orange, yellow, green. This photo has been much reproduced on the Web, like
here. It is worth noting that it also shows an ordinary rainbow flag, hoisted on a building in background - indeed, most rainbow flags used at the event were such, as revealed by the selection of photos from
Wikimedia .
Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
This flag employs the pattern (top-down) of: blue, violet, red, orange, yellow, green, and was used at the Madrid Pride 2008. The flag with the same pattern was used again in Valencia in 2015. It was hoisted from the Valencia City Hall on 25 June 2015, the day before the Pride Day. The photo, available here: http://epoca1.valenciaplaza.com/ver/159455/una-gran-bandera-gay-presidira-el-ayuntamiento-de-valencia-por-el-dia-del-orgullo-2015.html, suggest that the color order may have been reversed (i.e. green at the top), but it is difficult to tell, considering the vertical hoisting without the flagstaff.
Tomislav Todorović, 17 March 2020
Outside Spain, this flag has appeared in S o Paulo, Brazil, in 2022: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Parada_LGBTQIA%2B_2022_(52175792792).jpg. Most of the color shades are darker than in the flags from Spain, only green being lighter than in those, and the ratio is visibly less oblong (1:1 or very close), but the pattern is clearly the same.
Tomislav Todorović, 30 December 2022
image by Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
Flags with a different color pattern were used at the Madrid Pride/Europride 2007. They differed from the ordinary rainbow flags only in the positions of blue and violet colors, which were swapped here. It is difficult to say which side was meant to be up - note the wall decoration on the house in the right-hand part of the photo, with violet/purple at the top - but since the flags with red at the top prevail, it may be assumed that the case was the same here. The same flag, with red at the top, was used in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico, at the Gay Pride Parade in 2010 (image). Although the color shades seem to differ here, especially those of violet and blue, which look more like indigo and turquoise, respectively, the pattern is clearly the same.
Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
The earliest currently known appearance of this design was at the Mexico City Pride 2006. The photos of the flag can be found here, here, and here. There, red was undoubtedly at the top and the colors were mostly visibly lighter than those used in Madrid in 2007.
Tomislav Todorović, 24 September 2023
image by Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
A much more "unordered" pattern than the previous two was seen at a photo from Mexico City (link broken). There, the pattern (top-down) was: blue, violet, orange, yellow, red, green.
Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
image by Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
The flags with "unordered" pattern are actually not new: they were used in the USA in early 1990's, as revealed by this
photo from San Diego, California, which was taken in 1992 or 1993. Here, along with an ordinary rainbow flag with red at the top, a flag is shown with the following pattern: green, blue, violet, red, orange, yellow. The color shades look rather dark, partly perhaps due to the picture taking conditions, and partly perhaps due to the preservation condition of the original photo which, having been created in early 1990's, was almost certainly scanned before posting to the Web, but the use of darker color shades seems not to be unknown in the USA.
Tomislav Todorović, 5 October 2014
image by Tomislav Todorović, 26 June 2015
Another variant, which also displays a significant variation of color shades, was seen in Mumbai, India, on 16 August 2009. Its photos, which can be found here, here, here, and here, reveal that blue and violet are replaced with dark blue (slightly inclining towards indigo) and light blue, respectively. Red is also almost indistinguishable from orange - usually, it is the combined size of two stripes, being twice as big as that of any other color, that reveals that two colors are meant to be there.
Tomislav Todorović, 26 June 2015
image by Tomislav Todorović, 1 July 2015
Another six-striped flag was seen in New Delhi on 2009-07-02. The color pattern was: red, orange, yellow, pink (instead of violet or
purple), blue and green. Red, orange and yellow were darker and blue and green were lighter than on most rainbow flags.
Tomislav Todorović, 1 July 2015
image by Tomislav Todorović, 29 March 2016
Another six-striped variant is shown on a photo used by the Left Block, political party from Portugal in their campaign for legalization of same-sex marriages. That photo can be found here. The color pattern is: blue, violet, green, yellow, orange, red.
Tomislav Todorović, 29 March 2016
The flag which employs the pattern (top-down) of: blue, violet, green, yellow, orange, red, is presented in the image above. The same pattern was seen in Milan, Italy, on 29 June 2019, the photo being available here. On that flag, blue, violet and orange were much lighter than on most of rainbow flags, including the previous appearance of the same pattern, while yellow was visibly darker than usual.
Tomislav Todorović, 10 May 2020
images by Tomislav Todorović, 25 August 2018
The flag with with swapped places of yellow and green was used at 6th Kerala Queer Pride, which took place at Thiruvananthapuram on 11 July 2015; beside the flags, the pattern was also used for decorations on the wall posters1. At 7th Kerala Queer Pride, which took place at Kozhikode (Calicut) on 12 August 2016, the flag was widely used2,3,4,5,6,7; there are also examples of bandanas, turbans or shawls with this pattern, as often happens with the designs of political flags in India2. Curiously, it seems to have been much less used at 8th Kerala Queer Pride, which took place in Kochi (Cochin) on 12 August 2017; still there were some participants who carried it, mainly in the shawl-like manner8.
The flags with this pattern were almost always used with red at the top; still there are some examples of its use with violet at the top, from the 7th Kerala Queer Pride5.
Tomislav Todorović, 25 August 2018
Sources:
1: Queerala organization at Facebook - Photo album from 6th Kerala Queer Pride
2: Wikimedia Commons - Photos from 7th Kerala Queer Pride
3: Queerala organization at Facebook - Photo album #1 from 7th Kerala Queer Pride
4: Queerala organization at Facebook - Photo album #2 from 7th Kerala Queer Pride
5: The Times of India newspaper website - Photo gallery from 7th Kerala Queer Pride
6: Deccan Chornicle newspaper website
7: Asia Experts Forum website
8: Queerala organization at Facebook - Photo album from 8th Kerala Queer Pride
Somebody accidentally hoisted it upside-down?
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 7 September 2018
That's the question which might be asked about any - literally, any - rainbow flag, regardless of number, order or even colors of stripes. And as with all of the other variants, it is impossible to answer. Probably, it wasn't much important to the flag bearer, either.
Tomislav Todorović, 7 September 2018
Sure, but if most specimen of a flag are hoisted one way and only rarely is a specimen seen that's hoisted the other way, the hypothesis seems unavoidable that it's upside down. This is even more so with rainbow flags that are seen, unlike a rainbow, with the red at the bottom. I was merely asking whether there was anything to support or refute the hypothesis.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 14 September 2018
There was no evidence for either. However, bearing in mind that there is no "right side up" for the "default" rainbow flag, as well as for the 7-striped and 8-striped versions, the same is probably even more true for "unordered" versions, including this one, which depart from the natural rainbow pattern even further. Still, they all conform to what Gilbert Baker himself said: "The idea of the rainbow is what counts."
Tomislav Todorović, 15 September 2018
The flag with red at the top was also seen in Guadalajara, Mexico, at the Guadalajara Pride 2016. The photo from the event is available here.On this flag, yellow was darker and blue and violet were lighter than on the flags which were used in Kozhikode, India.
Tomislav Todorović, 8 October 2018
image by Tomislav Todorović, 20 June 2020
A flag which was seen in São Paulo, Brazil, on 26 June 2019, has had a highly unordered pattern: purple, blue, orange, green, red and yellow. It is not clear which side is up, because the flag is held by a person in their hands; here, purple is shown at the top, only because that corner of the flag was held by the hand closer to the observer/photographer.
Tomislav Todorović, 20 June 2020
Source: The Press Democrat website: https://www.pressdemocrat.com/lifestyle/celebrations/9758995-181/celebrating-lgbtq-pride-month-around?sba=AAS&artslide=82
(NOTE: due to some unclear bug, the above address will not always lead directly to the "Slide 83 of 96", but it can always be reached by clicking the arrow buttons as many times as necessary; when that is completed, the said address is displayed.)
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