Aromanticism is the state of never experiencing romantic attraction ("falling in love"), i.e. the complete lack thereof. [1,2] Since the lack of romantic attraction, complete or incomplete, is not necessarily tied to the lack of sexual attraction and various combinations of these may exist, the persons may be described, beside their sexual orientation, in regard to their romantic orientation, aromanticism making a category thereof. [1,3] Tomislav Todorović, 21 March 2020 Sources:
[1] Aromanticism at LGBTA Wiki: https://lgbta.wikia.org/wiki/Aromantic
[2] Aromanticism at Asexual Visibility and Education Network wiki: http://wiki.asexuality.org/Aromantic
[3] Romantic orientation at Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romantic_orientation
The flag was used with reversed color order (black at the top) at the Twin Cities Pride in Minneapolis on 23 June 2019. The photo can be viewed here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/52746562@N00/48144214387/. As this is currently the only known example, it is too early to tell whether this is another "no right side up" flag, especially considering that it is still rarely used at all. Tomislav Todorović, 7 July 2020
The original proposal had four stripes of green, yellow, orange and black; green stood for aromanticism, as in later designs; yellow represented friendship (as yellow roses do in the language of flowers); while orange, the color between yellow and red, stood for gray-romantics (people in the "gray zone" between aromanticism and full romanticism) and black represented alloromantics (i.e. fully romantic people) who "reject the traditional ideas of romance." [1,6] The author and creation date of this design are not known, [6] but it seems to have been created before 2014. It is also unknown if it was ever used, except online. Tomislav Todorović, 21 March 2020 Sources:
[1] Aromanticism at LGBTA Wiki: https://lgbta.wikia.org/wiki/Aromantic
[6] University of Northern Colorado, The Gender & Sexuality Resource Center Pride Flags: https://www.unco.edu/gender-sexuality-resource-center/resources/pride-flags.aspx
Before the present flag, Cameron Whimsy had created a similar one, with yellow stripe instead of white, and published it on 7 February 2014. [1,6,13] The symbolism was essentially the same, except the yellow color may have been attributed to the lithromanticism (condition of person who may experience romantic attration, but do not want it reciprocated). [13,14] The reason for eventual change of yellow into white was possibility of sensory problems to certain viewers, as well as possible misunderstanding due to color meaning in various cultures. [1,13] Tomislav Todorović, 21 March 2020 Sources:
[1] Aromanticism at LGBTA Wiki: https://lgbta.wikia.org/wiki/Aromantic
[6] University of Northern Colorado, The Gender & Sexuality Resource Center Pride Flags: https://www.unco.edu/gender-sexuality-resource-center/resources/pride-flags.aspx
[13] Cameron Whimsy at Tumblr - Explanation of original flag design: https://cameronwhimsy.tumblr.com/post/75868343112/ive-been-reading-up-on-a-lot-of-the-discussion
[14] Lithromanticism at LGBTA Wiki: https://lgbta.wikia.org/wiki/Lithromantic