We’ve got you covered in terms of wearable rainbow pride items as well! Our rainbow flag lapel pins are available in a variety of styles. Gay Pride Lapel Pins & Rainbow Parade Sashes Interested in a customized pride parade banner? We can help with that too! Learn more about our custom flag options here. Gay pride banners for your house and garden flags are also available in several sizes, with a sleeve instead of grommets. Our tall and wide rainbow gay pride banners are a great way to lead your marching group for the gay pride parade or an easy start to your homemade parade banner. These gay pride banners are great options for parade floats, are available in several sizes and can be customized to fit your needs.
Looking for high quality rainbow and LGBTQ pride banners? We carry those too! We have a few options available, including a rainbow pride fan, a rainbow banner with wide stripes, a rainbow banner with narrow stripes, and a vertical rainbow banner. We also have rainbow car window flags, perfect for flying on your vehicle or as a motorcycle flag. Decorate your potted plants, create beautiful pride month centerpieces or place a mini rainbow flag in a base on your desk at work. These are perfect for your gay pride parade float or celebration.
Mini rainbow pride flags are available in 4圆" and 8x12" on staffs. Both of these flags feature individually hand sewn rainbow stripes made of durable outdoor nylon and come in a wide variety of sizes, great for displaying at your home or business, marching in a parade and everything in between. Two of our most popular flags are our traditional 6-stripe rainbow flagĪnd our original 8-stripe rainbow flag. Looking for high quality gay pride flags and LGBTQ banners? At Gettysburg Flag Works, we are proud to carry a wide variety of pride flags and banners, including rainbow flags, transgender flags, bisexual pride flags, and more. “ Think of all the kids who don’t feel comfortable coming out and the message that sends.American States, Territories & Cities Flags “How upset a lot of residents are has been really discouraging,” Jamie Belnap, a Heber resident and the mother of a queer teenaged son, told the Salt Lake Tribune in August. Potter claimed she began receiving inquiries wondering if the previous banner policy allowed banners with other allegedly similarly political messages protesting abortion or pornography or featuring symbols associated with the Ku Klux Klan or Nazis.ĭespite the complaints of some residents, others took a more positive view and noted the rainbow banners speak to children who are in the closet and looking for affirmation. “As a Christian, our family believes that marriage is between a man and a woman,” one woman is quoted as saying, while others claimed the flag and, by extension, LGBTQ+ rights, were political. Some residents of the heavily Mormon city of roughly 16 thousand residents east of Salt Lake City questioned the appropriateness of the display on city’s Facebook page and at city council meetings. The change was brought about after rainbow Pride banners appeared in June of last year. In the past, residents could apply to hang banners from the city’s lampposts for a few hundred dollars as long as they were noncommercial in nature. Additionally, banner applicants must first obtain sponsorship from the city of Heber, Wasatch County, or the Heber Valley Chamber of Commerce before their application will be considered by the city. The new ordinance requires any event or message promoted on the banners must be nonpolitical and not for profit. “It has pretty much eliminated the option of private citizens funding banners and requesting them to be hung on Main Street, unless they are able to get sponsorship from the city, the county or the chamber, and that sponsorship means some financial sponsorship,” Kelleen Potter, the mayor of Heber City and mother of two LGBTQ+ teens, explained. But when some residents complained that Pride and LGBTQ+ rights were political and did not represent the values or beliefs of the community, Yahoo News reports the city passed a new ordinance in August raising the costs and generally making it more difficult to continue the practice. For the past two years, rainbow banners had flown from lampposts on Main Street in the city of Heber, Utah, in celebration of Pride month.