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Rainbow Flags

Nylon flags come complete with canvas header and brass grommets.
Rainbow Flags

Item # Size Style price 
N23RB 2' x 3' Nylon Outdoor $34.50
N35RB 3' x 5' Nylon Outdoor $39.50
N46RB 4' x 6' Nylon Outdoor $52.50
N58RB 5' x 8' Nylon Outdoor $96.50
N610RB 6' x 10' Nylon Outdoor $132.50

Pleated Nylon Rainbow Fan

Pleated Nylon Rainbow Fan With Canvas Header and Brass Grommets

Item # Size Style Price 
N36RB 3' x 6' Nylon Outdoor $132.50


4" x 6" Cotton No-Fray Rainbow Flags

A special no-fray material is used that requires no hemming
mounted on a 3/16" x 10" natural wood staff - no spear

Gross Lots Only

Item # Price per Gross lot (144) 
C46RB $88.50


History of the Rainbow Flag

The first Rainbow Flag was designed in 1978 by Gilbert Baker, a San Francisco artist, who created the flag in response to a local activist's call for the need of a community symbol. (Before the pink triangle was used as a symbol of pride.) Baker designed a flag with eight stripes: pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. According to Baker, those colors represented, respectively: sexuality, life, healing, sun, nature, art, harmony, and spirit. Baker dyed and sewed the material for the first flag himself. Baker soon approached San Francisco's Paramount Flag Company about mass producing and selling his "gay flag". Unfortunately, Baker had hand-dyed all the colors, and since the color "hot pink" was not commercially available, mass production of his eight-striped version became impossible. The flag was thus reduced to seven stripes. In November 1978, San Francisco's gay community was stunned when the city's first openly gay supervisor, Harvey Milk, was assassinated. Wanting to demonstrate the gay community's strength and solidarity in the aftermath of this tragedy, the 1979 Pride Parade Committee decided to use Baker's flag. The committee eliminated the indigo stripe so they could divide the colors evenly along the parade route - three colors on one side of the street and three on the other. Soon the six colors were integrated into a six-striped version that became popularized. In 1989, the rainbow flag received nationwide attention after John Stout successfully sued his landlords in West Hollywood, when they prohibited him from displaying the flag from his apartment balcony. Meanwhile, Baker is still in San Francisco, and still making more flags.


Rainbow Flags - Maine