#lesbian visibility
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~Happy Lesbian Day of Visibility to everyone!~ (including my wife >:3 )
(I like to imagine everyone in this photo is in a cute polycule. A polycute if you will…)
Happy Lesbian Visibility Week to all Lesbians.
Mspec Lesbians
Lesboys
Lesbois
He/him Lesbians
It/its Lesbians
Lesbian Neopronoun Users
Trans Lesbians
BIPOC Lesbians
Aspec Lesbians
Neurodivergent Lesbians
Disabled Lesbians
Straight Lesbians
Muslim Lesbians
Jewish Lesbians
Pagan Lesbians
Plus Size Lesbians
Intersex Lesbians
Closeted Lesbians
All Lesbians.
Nobamaki for lesbian visibility day!
Frida y Chavela!
Which other famous lesbians of history can you name?
You can find these two as a print in my Etsy store:
Frida y Chavela. Lesbian art queer queer lgbtq | Etsy México
lesbian visibility week is over so excuse me while I dissipate into the aether now
It’s #LesbianVisibilityDay!
Did you know violet flowers used to be a lesbian symbol?
Often featured in Greek poet Sappho’s writings, violets also made a comeback in the 1927 Broadway play, “The Captive,“ about two lesbians, where one woman sends a bouquet of violets to her lover. There was so much public uproar about the play that protestors and police shut down the final performance in France. But the violet became known as the "lesbian flower,” and supporters of the play would wear them in their lapels, or as a subtle symbol to other women that they were gay.
What little LGBTQ+ “symbols” do you wear today - rainbow shoelaces, lesbian flag-colored phone background? Also…can we make violets A Thing again?
April 26 is Lesbian Visibility Day
LETS FUCKING GOOOOOOO
*Maria and Carol exist*
Nick sopping: LET’S GO LESBIANS LET’S GO!!!!
"I kissed a girl and I liked it"️✊ Happy Pride Month️❤️✊
ILD: the isolation of Israel’s ‘First Lesbians’
ILD: the isolation of Israel’s ‘First Lesbians’
For a long time Hana Klein thought she was the only lesbian in Israel, and maybe in the whole world. She was born in 1951, grew up in Tel Aviv and at 11 realized that her feelings were a bit different from those of her girlfriends. But she didn’t know why. Klein says that in the Israel of the 1950s and ‘60s, “there were no words for it.”
The first hint that she wasn’t alone was at a kiosk…