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Welcome to Gay Magazine Australia, your online resource in helping the LGBTI (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender & Intersex) community of Australia find gay friendly businesses in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, Hobart & Darwin. Find goods and services from businesses around Australia in our gay friendly business directory & rest assured they won’t discriminate & are not prejudice. Whether your looking to travel, build a house, a mechanic or looking for a new piece of jewellery, our gay friendly directory is your solution for members of the LGBTI community in Australia.
The Rainbow Flag is the #1 most recognised symbol for the LGBTI around the world. Gay Magazine supports marriage equality in Australia, Rainbow Flag Equality Guide and Same Sex Marriage Guide – LGBTI Magazine & online directory helping find gay friendly businesses around Australia. Gay Magazine is part of the Rainbow Flag Network, Rainbow Flag Magazine and Directory. Whether you are in Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, Tasmania, The Northern Territory, South Australia or The Australian Capital Territory there is a gay magazine for you. Find gay friendly service providers Australia wide quickly using our gay directory online or by picking up our Rainbow Flag magazine. The gay pride Rainbow Flag is recognised world wide, and is your number one solution in Australia to finding who to use. Gay magazine supports Same sex weddings in Australia & is your LGBTI directory of the future. If you are interested in advertising with in the Rainbow Flag Network please see our advertising page for more info. We are also part of the Same Sex Wedding Guide network. Link for Rainbow Flag Advertising option here : Gay Magazine on Rainbow Flag
It was in the year 1978 Gilbert Baker designed the first rainbow flag, which was in response to activists for a symbol for the community. Gilbert Baker, then a young a San Francisco artist, designed the flag with eight stripes: pink, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Gilbert Baker then dyed and sewed the material for the first flag himself. Baker then approached a local company to mass-produce the flags he designed & found out that the “hot pink” wasn’t commercially available to purchase. The flag was quickly reduced to seven stripes.
In November 1978, San Francisco’s lesbian, gay & bisexual community was shocked when the city’s first openly gay supervisor, Harvey Milk, was terribly assassinated. To show the gay community’s strength and solidarity in the aftermath of the tragedy, the Pride Committee decided to use the rainbow flag designed by Baker. It was at this point the indigo stripe was eliminated so that the colours are divided evenly along the parade route – with three colours on one side and three on the other. It wasn’t long until the six colours were incorporated into a six-striped version. The flag has become an international symbol of pride and the diversity amongst the lgbti community. The Rainbow Flag colours red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple make it one of the most recognised flags displayed around the world.
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