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Pride Gallery/Androgyne: Difference between revisions

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Androgyne_Necker_Cube.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|It's ambiguous: it is either concave or convex depending on how you look at it.}}
Androgyne_Necker_Cube.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|It's ambiguous: it is either concave or convex depending on how you look at it.}}
Androgyne_flag_2020_redesign.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The dark blue stripe represents masculinity <br> The light blue stripe represents community <br> The purple stripe represents androgyne identity <br>The light pink stripe represents love <br> The dark pink stripe represents femininity}}
Androgyne_flag_2020_redesign.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|The dark blue stripe represents masculinity <br> The light blue stripe represents community <br> The purple stripe represents androgyne identity <br>The light pink stripe represents love <br> The dark pink stripe represents femininity}}
Androgyne by wrennnnnnnnn.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning||Orange is a lesser known masculine color, one that doesn't play off of the whole Pink Vs. Blue aesthetic, such as the currently accepted Androgyne flag. Purple, similarly, is a low key feminine color, despite being a mix of masculine colors (red and blue.) The white in the middle represents an absence of gender, same as on the Genderqueer and Nonbinary flags. The symbol in the middle is a Necker Cube, an optical illusion that can look both concave and convex, first proposed as a symbol for androgynes in 1996 by Raphael Carter. The teal is a mixture of two colors, both gendered on opposite sides of the binary."}}
Androgyne by wrennnnnnnnn.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|Orange is a lesser known masculine color, one that doesn't play off of the whole Pink Vs. Blue aesthetic, such as the currently accepted Androgyne flag. Purple, similarly, is a low key feminine color, despite being a mix of masculine colors (red and blue.) The white in the middle represents an absence of gender, same as on the Genderqueer and Nonbinary flags. The symbol in the middle is a Necker Cube, an optical illusion that can look both concave and convex, first proposed as a symbol for androgynes in 1996 by Raphael Carter. The teal is a mixture of two colors, both gendered on opposite sides of the binary."}}
Androgyne by pucashell-z.png|{{#simple-tooltip:Meaning|Green is gender neutral, and represents androgyny achieved through the negation of masculine and feminine characteristics. Purple is neutral, but is combined from red/pink and blue, which represents androgyny achieved through the combination of masculine and feminine characteristics. Purple and green are also complementary colors, which represents androgyne as an identity that's both masculine and feminine, while also being its own separate gender.}}
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