Show Your Pride at Home
Whether you celebrate Pride Month or fly your colors year-round, these handcrafted LGBTQ+ pride flags from Flagwix bring vibrant, lasting beauty to your front porch, garden, or living space. Each design is double-sided printed on durable canvas — built to wave proudly through every season.
Pride Progress Grommet Flag
The classic rainbow paired with a chevron honoring trans, BIPOC, and HIV/AIDS communities. Heavy-duty grommets, made for outdoor flagpole display.
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Pride Progress House & Garden Flag
Same inclusive Progress Pride design in a versatile garden & house flag format. Three sizes for porches, gardens, and front-yard display.
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250 Years — We The People Means Everyone
A meaningful crossover honoring both America's 250th anniversary (1776–2026) and LGBTQ+ pride — rainbow colors meet the Constitution's founding promise. Heavy-duty grommet flag for outdoor display.
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We The People Means Everyone
A bold fusion of Pride and Constitution — rainbow stripes meet “We The People Means Everyone,” a patriotic reminder that founding ideals embrace all Americans.
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Rainbow Pride Fan Flag
A striking half-circle fan flag in classic rainbow Pride colors. Heat-transfer printing on durable canvas. Available in 1.5×3 ft and 3×6 ft — perfect for porches and parades.
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Be Kind Peace Sign Flag
A vibrant peace sign at center, framed by the timeless message “In A World Where You Can Be Anything, Be Kind.” Set against rainbow Pride colors — a gentle but powerful reminder.
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Human Kind, Be Both
A clever wordplay design — “Human Kind, Be Both” — on a vibrant rainbow backdrop symbolizing LGBT diversity. Two ideas in one inspiring message: humanity and kindness.
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Equality Sunflower Flag
A radiant sunflower at center, surrounded by 7 core values — Kindness, Peace, Equality, Love, Inclusion, Hope, and Diversity. Available in 3 sizes for indoor and outdoor display.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What do the colors of the omnisexual flag mean?
The omnisexual flag features five horizontal stripes. Light pink represents attraction to women, deep pink represents femininity, black (or dark purple) symbolizes attraction to all genders regardless of identity, deep blue represents masculinity, and light blue represents attraction to men. The colors together symbolize attraction to all genders, with awareness of each.
What is the difference between omnisexual and pansexual?
Omnisexuality means attraction to all genders with awareness of gender — gender is recognized and can play a role in attraction. Pansexuality means attraction to all genders regardless of gender — gender doesn't factor into who someone is attracted to. Both are valid identities, and many people use the terms in ways that feel personally meaningful.
When was the omnisexual flag created?
The omnisexual pride flag first appeared in 2015, making it one of the newer pride flags. As of 2026, it has been in use for 11 years. The term "omnisexual" itself dates back to the 1990s, but the flag came much later as the community grew more visible online.
Is omnisexuality the same as bisexuality?
No. Bisexuality traditionally means attraction to two or more genders, often (but not always) defined as men and women. Omnisexuality explicitly means attraction to all genders, including non-binary identities, with the awareness that gender shapes attraction. The two identities can overlap for some, but they're distinct labels with different meanings.
How can I show support for the omnisexual community?
Allies can support the omnisexual community by learning the distinction between omnisexuality and similar identities (like pansexuality and bisexuality), using correct labels when people share them, and displaying the omnisexual flag during Pride Month or year-round. Listening — without judgment or correction — is often the most meaningful form of support.










