Editing Pride Gallery/Genderqueer
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<gallery mode="packed-hover"> | <gallery mode="packed-hover"> | ||
Genderqueer.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|-Lavender (mixture of blue and pink): androgyny.<br>-White: gender neutral.<br>-Green: inverse of lavender, for those identities defined outside the binary.}} | Genderqueer.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|-Lavender (mixture of blue and pink): androgyny.<br>-White: gender neutral.<br>-Green: inverse of lavender, for those identities defined outside the binary.}} | ||
Genderqueer-2.png | Genderqueer-2.png | ||
Genderqueer by willow-weaves (1).png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The colors themselves mean the same thing [as the most common GQ flag]: green for outside of the binary, violet for a combination of the binary genders, and white for having no gender. The lines are supposed to look like a stylized infinity mobius strip and has an x when perceived as just a flat image to symbolize complex relationships with gender and a rejection of cisnormativity.}} | Genderqueer by willow-weaves (1).png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The colors themselves mean the same thing [as the most common GQ flag]: green for outside of the binary, violet for a combination of the binary genders, and white for having no gender. The lines are supposed to look like a stylized infinity mobius strip and has an x when perceived as just a flat image to symbolize complex relationships with gender and a rejection of cisnormativity.}} | ||
Genderqueer by willow-weaves (2).png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The colors themselves mean the same thing [as the most common GQ flag]: green for outside of the binary, violet for a combination of the binary genders, and white for having no gender. The lines are supposed to look like a stylized infinity mobius strip and has an x when perceived as just a flat image to symbolize complex relationships with gender and a rejection of cisnormativity.}} | Genderqueer by willow-weaves (2).png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The colors themselves mean the same thing [as the most common GQ flag]: green for outside of the binary, violet for a combination of the binary genders, and white for having no gender. The lines are supposed to look like a stylized infinity mobius strip and has an x when perceived as just a flat image to symbolize complex relationships with gender and a rejection of cisnormativity.}} | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
}} | }} |