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    Androgyne: Difference between revisions

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    Another alternate androgyne flag was created by Milith Rusignuolo on July 2, 2015.<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20180210192310/https://avia-viridis.neocities.org/flags.html</ref> Pink and green represents androgynes whose position on the gender spectrum changes, or who use the term interchangeably with other terms. Fuchsia represents femandrogynes, or androgynes who are more feminine than masculine. Purple represents versandrogynes or neutrandrogynes, who are relatively equally feminine and masculine. Blue represents mascandrogynes, or androgynes who are more masculine than feminine.
    Another alternate androgyne flag was created by Milith Rusignuolo on July 2, 2015.<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20180210192310/https://avia-viridis.neocities.org/flags.html</ref> Pink and green represents androgynes whose position on the gender spectrum changes, or who use the term interchangeably with other terms. Fuchsia represents femandrogynes, or androgynes who are more feminine than masculine. Purple represents versandrogynes or neutrandrogynes, who are relatively equally feminine and masculine. Blue represents mascandrogynes, or androgynes who are more masculine than feminine.


    Another alternate androgyne flag was designed by wrennnnnnnnn and post on r/QueerVexillology on June 19, 2020. Orange is used as a lesser known masculine color, one that doesn't play off of the pink vs. blue aesthetic. Purple, similarly, is an alternate feminine color. The white in the middle represents an absence of gender, same as on the genderqueer and non-binary flags. The Necker Cube is used in the middle as an androgyne symbol. The teal is a mixture of two colors, both gendered on opposite sides of the binary.
    Another alternate androgyne flag was created by wrennnnnnnnn and post on r/QueerVexillology on June 19, 2020. Orange is used as a lesser known masculine color, one that doesn't play off of the pink vs. blue aesthetic. Purple, similarly, is an alternate feminine color. The white in the middle represents an absence of gender, same as on the genderqueer and non-binary flags. The Necker Cube is used in the middle as an androgyne symbol. The teal is a mixture of two colors, both gendered on opposite sides of the binary.


    Another androgyne flag was designed by emsydacat on August 1, 2021. There are two thinner stripes of equal size, which are pink, representing femininity, and blue, representing masculinity, and one thick purple stripe, representing a mix of the two, as well as neutrality. Emphasis is put on the purple stripe through the difference in size to represent how androgyne people fall between masculine and feminine, rather than being one or the other.
    Another androgyne flag was created by emsydacat on August 1, 2021. There are two thinner stripes of equal size, which are pink, representing femininity, and blue, representing masculinity, and one thick purple stripe, representing a mix of the two, as well as neutrality. Emphasis is put on the purple stripe through the difference in size to represent how androgyne people fall between masculine and feminine, rather than being one or the other.


    Other symbols of androgyny include the the Necker Cube. In was proposed as a symbol in 1996 by an androgyne person, Raphael Carter, due to it's ambiguous geometric shape. Carter says "because it is either concave or convex depending on how you look at it."<ref>https://practicalandrogyny.com/2011/06/25/the-necker-cube-symbol-for-androgyny/</ref>
    Other symbols of androgyny include the the Necker Cube. In was proposed as a symbol in 1996 by an androgyne person, Raphael Carter, due to it's ambiguous geometric shape. Carter says "because it is either concave or convex depending on how you look at it."<ref>https://practicalandrogyny.com/2011/06/25/the-necker-cube-symbol-for-androgyny/</ref>
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