seer-of-lxght: Introducing the foliage bigender flag! I find the main 5-stripe bigender flag to be v
seer-of-lxght: Introducing the foliage bigender flag! I find the main 5-stripe bigender flag to be very ugly (and I often confuse it with the intersex pride flag) and most other bigender flags introduced hold a very binary colourscheme (though admittedly I enjoy some more than others), so here is my suggestion for a new flag.The colours green and yellow are taken from the colourwheel under the consideration that they are near blue and red respectively yet still separate, thus being their own entities to represent a potential connection or separation from binary genders or alignments, if not something in between or something else entirely.The muted cyan and magenta are taken from their typical binary considerations, though meddled with in such a way that I find their binary connotations to not be as heavily implied.Purple is a colour I have found very commonly used on bigender flags and enjoy to use it here as it seems to often be the best representation of two colours mixing and forming their own unique identity, per se, much like the bigender experience. Purple itself is a colour that easily mixes with and flows with blues, pinks, white, greys, and black very easily, which I find thoroughly ascribes itself to how any genders can mix in being bigender and to how it fluctuates or layers its pair in how strongly they are expressed.I wish for this to be considered alongside the stripe meanings, which are as follows:Pale Green: A potential lack of (a) gender or fluid genders, the potential for the gender pair within a bigender person to fluctuate in strength.Green: Masculine/masculine-in-nature genders.Muted Cyan: Binary male & male-aligned genders.Lavender: Inherent nonbinary-ness and complex relations with sexuality as well as gender, multiple genders.Muted Magenta: Binary female & female-aligned genders.Golden Orange: Feminine/feminine-in-nature genders.Yellow: Xenogenders, the potential use of neopronouns, a vast range of experiences and interpretations.As usual, I am open to constructive criticisms as I am only one person and admittedly do not know much of the ongoigns within the bigender community! -- source link