Leather pride flag

The leather pride flag was designed by Tony DeBlase in Chicago, Illinois.

[1][2] DeBlase explained his decision to create the flag:[3]For the 20th anniversary of Stonewall, I felt that the time was right for the Leather men and women who have been participating in these same parades and events more and more visibly in recent years to have a similar simple, elegant banner that would serve as a symbol of their own identity and interests.

"[7] For the 24th annual Folsom Street Fair, held September 30, 2007, the official poster artwork was a controversial photo featuring well-known LGBT and BDSM community members in festive and fetish attire including Sister Roma "as players in an innovative version of the culturally iconographic" The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci, complete with table draped with the leather pride flag and "cluttered with sex toys, whips, and various (BDSM) restraints".

In 2019, the Schwules Museum remarked on the flag's impact:[13]The Leather Pride flag is at the beginning of a long line of similar flags, marking a turning point in the history of the mostly gay leather and BDSM movements: moving away from secret signs and symbols (hanky cloths, for example) to more obvious and public visibility, both in the gay scene and society in general.One of the three original flags that DeBlase assembled was donated to the Leather Archives & Museum (LA&M), where it is on public display.

[4] In 2006, fetish pornography studio Kink.com bought the San Francisco Armory building.

[20][21]Although Tony DeBlase is quoted as saying the design of the leather pride flag, which he created, is copyrighted in the U.S. (as well as all countries where the Berne Convention standards apply), copyright is automatic, and need not be obtained through official registration with any government office.

Once an idea has been produced as a tangible form, for example by securing it in a fixed medium (such as a drawing, sheet music, photograph, a videotape, or a computer file), the copyright holder is entitled to enforce their exclusive rights.

[7] On October 11, 1991, at the opening ceremonies of Living in Leather, a Canadian version of the leather pride flag was presented, which added to the original flag's design a row of red maple leaves running horizontally through the white stripe.

The BDSM rights flag, designed by Tanos, a Master from the United Kingdom, is partially loosely based on the design of the leather pride flag and also includes a version of the BDSM Emblem (but not similar enough to fall within Steve Quagmyr's specific copyright claims for the Emblem).

red, blue, and black flag folded within a triangular storage case.
One of three original leather pride flags created by Tony DeBlase in 1989, on display at the Leather Archives & Museum .
Leather pride flag at Vancouver Pride Parade (2009)
BDSM Rights Flag colour
The BDSM rights flag