Polyamorous Flagge

Used on: Polyamorous

Polyamorous Pride-Flagge mit ihren charakteristischen farbigen Streifen.

Designer: Jim Evans · Late summer/early fall 1995

Three equal horizontal stripes, blue, red, and black, with a gold Greek letter pi (π) centered on the red stripe. Made by Jim Evans in Microsoft Paint on Windows 3.1 and released into the public domain.

Stripe HEX RGB CMYK Pantone Meaning
Top stripe #0000FF 0,0,255 C:100 M:100 Y:0 K:0 n/a Openness and honesty among all partners
Middle stripe #FF0000 255,0,0 C:0 M:100 Y:100 K:0 n/a Love and passion
Bottom stripe #000000 0,0,0 C:0 M:0 Y:0 K:100 n/a Solidarity with those who must hide their relationships
Pi symbol #FFFF00 255,255,0 C:0 M:0 Y:100 K:0 n/a Value of emotional attachment to others

History

Pi is the first letter of "polyamory" written with the Greek prefix; as a mathematical constant it is infinite and non-repeating, a play on "infinite love." Despite becoming the de facto standard for nearly three decades, the Pi Flag was persistently criticized: harsh clashing colors, resemblance to some far-right flags (causing distress to polyamorous people of color), an obscure pi symbol, and an overall amateurish aesthetic.

Infinity Heart Variant (University of Northern Colorado Poly Community, 2017)

Identical three-stripe layout with the pi symbol replaced by a white infinity heart. This version coexisted with the original but neither achieved universal acceptance.

PolyamProud Tricolor (Red Howell, 2022), also in current use

Chosen by a democratic vote of 30,827 participants after a year-long redesign process by the PolyamProud committee. Three stripes, cyan blue, magenta, and dark purple, with a white chevron holding a gold heart. Red Howell: "The intention was to create a simple, bold tricolor, with a contemporary approach to traditional vexillological elements from the original Pi flag." Both the Pi Flag and the 2022 Tricolor remain in active use; there is no single universally mandated version.