Pride month tag game mostly for my moots! Put all your flags and your fav fictional crush 😛
Atm I love snowball bfdi, whom I headcanon to be transmale 💥💥💥
Tags: @soph-2010 @sleepystrutter28 @gellyboy4 @the1stastronaut @saltyluvslucky @hjhhnffjdiwohd-gay @weirdg00p and open tags! I have so many mutual holey shit
Yet another flag!!
Can you tell that these are self-indulgent yet??
A flag for sapphics that are male/female bigender
Or, in other words, a flag for male/female bigender beings that are sapphic!!
Colour meanings (from top to bottom) and such below the cut
You don't need to use my meanings, but they're the ones that I've personally applied
Muted/Dark Purple (Unsure of this colour's name) - Specific and/or collective attraction to traditionally masculine and/or traditionally feminine presentations or regardless of presentation
Pink - Sapphic attraction
White - No meaning // Apply whatever you may like!!
Pastel Purple/Lilac(??) - being male & female
Pastel Green - Personal gender expression & presentation, whether you may be a femme, stud, butch, a mix, in between, neutral, or something else entirely!!
Pride month means Pride Flags! I created five different cross stitch patterns of watercolor art versions of my favorite flag of inclusivity. What a wonderful gift to make for someone to show your support as an ally or a proud member of the LGBTQ community! LOVE IS LOVE.
In honor of pride month .. some objectum trans pride flags! More or less low key. Feel free to do your own in similar fashion or request some (though I am a little busy) :-]
Trans Pride, Trans Rights! 💖💙 Say it loud and proud with this wonderful illustrated print by @zandegoop!
💖 mush.house/zandegoop 💙
A brand new to addition to our Trans Day of Visibility collection! This series is a special collection to highlight trans artists and raise money for charity in the lead up to March 31st!
Preppy Has No Gender: A Reflection on Style and Identity
There are moments when a simple image — a person walking in a pleated skirt, a blazer, and knee-high socks — can provoke more reactions than a thousand words. Some looks are filled with admiration, others with curiosity, and some, still, with discomfort. Not because there is anything objectively strange about that combination of clothes, but because for a long time we were taught that clothing had to serve a very specific function: to tell us who is who.
For decades, fashion worked as a silent system of classification. It didn’t only say whether someone was formal or casual, elegant or careless — it also suggested whether someone was “a man” or “a woman.” Each garment seemed to have an assigned place, and stepping outside of it meant risking judgment. But history shows us that these rules were never natural: they were constructed. And like all cultural constructions, they can change.
The preppy style was born in a very different context from today’s. It emerged in academic environments, where clothing was not meant to attract attention but to express belonging, order, and care. Dressing a certain way was a way of saying, “I am here, I respect this place and the people in it.” The skirt, the blazer, the white shirt, the knee-high socks — they were all part of a visual language that spoke of structure and intention. It did not speak of gender; it spoke of presence.
Over time, however, that language became simplified and hardened. Clothes began to be labeled. Some became “feminine,” others “masculine.” And those labels, repeated over generations, started to feel like truths. But if we look at the history of fashion, we see how fragile they really are. What feels natural today was unthinkable yesterday, and what creates resistance now may become ordinary tomorrow.
In recent years, we have been living through a deep shift in how we understand gender. More and more people feel that rigid categories are not enough to describe who they are. And this is not a passing trend — it is a cultural transformation, a search for greater honesty, greater freedom, and a life lived with fewer masks. In this process, clothing becomes a crucial territory, because it is one of the most visible ways we express identity.
The preppy look, with its mix of tradition and simplicity, occupies a fascinating place in this new landscape. It is not a style that shouts, provokes, or seeks to tear everything down. On the contrary, it is a style that organizes, balances, and gives form. And precisely because of that, it becomes powerful when it opens itself to diversity. It allows people of all genders to find in it a way to express themselves without feeling out of place.
When someone who does not fit traditional molds chooses to wear a pleated skirt and a blazer, they are not denying anything. They are adding something. They are expanding the meaning of those garments. They are saying that elegance, care, and aesthetic coherence do not belong to just one type of body or one identity. They belong to anyone who chooses to inhabit them.
Accepting that preppy can be worn by anyone does not mean erasing differences or making everyone the same. It means something more subtle and more human: recognizing that each person can find beauty and comfort in different places. That a garment can hold many meanings, and that none of them invalidates the others.
The resistance that sometimes appears in the face of these changes often comes from a fear of losing reference points. When rules become more flexible, some people feel the world becomes less predictable. But history shows us that diversity does not destroy order — it enriches it. A campus where different expressions of style coexist is not a chaotic place; it is a living one.
In this sense, the new preppy is not a break from the past, but an expansion of it. It keeps the attention to detail, the cleanliness, the intention behind each piece. But it no longer demands that those qualities be tied to a specific identity. It allows more people to see themselves reflected in it.
Perhaps that is why it feels so relevant today. In a world that moves fast and sometimes seems to lose its balance, preppy offers a sense of order. And when that order is combined with openness, respect, and diversity, it becomes something much deeper than a simple look — it becomes a space of belonging.
Dressing preppy today can be a quiet but meaningful gesture. It does not say, “This is what you must be.” It says, “This is what I choose to be.” And when that choice is available to everyone, regardless of gender or identity, it becomes an invitation to inhabit fashion in a freer, more honest way.
At Preppy Vibe, we believe that elegance is not about exclusion, but about inclusion. That true sophistication is not about following rigid rules, but about knowing when it is time to transform them. The preppy of today is not a cage — it is a meeting point. A place where tradition and change can coexist.
And perhaps that is its most lasting strength: the idea that style, like people, is more interesting when it has room to be many things at once.