ryanyflags:

Ctiaspec flag.
It has 5 equally sized horizontal stripes.
From top to bottom, the colours are: dark warm purple, pinkish purple, light cool grey, cyanish blue, and dark blue purple.ALT
Ctingender flag.
It has 7 horizontal stripes, all of which are equally sized, except the center stripe, which has twice the thickness of the others.
From top to bottom, the colours are: light cool grey, bubblegum pink, darker purpler pink, cold purple, blue, cyan, and light cool grey.ALT

tciaspectcingender

tciaspec : an umbrella term for anyone on the cistrans/transcis/tris spectrum. It includes all cistrans/transcis/tris genders, partial cistrans/transcis/tris genders, cistrans/transcis/tris aligned and adjacent genders, and genders which are in some way similar to / resemblant of cistrans/transcis/tris -ness.

tcingender : an umbrella term for all genders cistrans/transcis/tris in nature.

A decorative divider.
It's in the shape of a straight line, with a 4 pointed star in the center.
The colours, from left to right, are a chunky horizontal gradient of light cool grey, bubblegum pink, darker purpler pink, cold purple, blue, cyan, and light cool grey.ALT

Cistrans/transcis/tris versions of terms like cingender, tingender (tingender link 2), and tiaspec.

I used this tris flag for the colours, and followed the general formats of these flags. So viaspec uses 5 stripes, with a lighter center colour, and gradients to darker colours at the edges. In-gender uses 7 stripes, the center having twice the size of the rest, and a gradient of light colours on the outside, with dark colours on the inside (like the mingender flag).

I did combine/edit the colours for tciaspec, to fit all the tris colours into 5 stripes.

Oh and for the terms names’, I would have preferred something closer to tris, but I couldn’t really figure that spelling out. So I chose T (first letter of trans) and C (first letter of cis) instead.
Also, the order with T first and C second, already seem to be medical words? But ctingender is already a different mogai term, so I had to use the tc (instead of ct) spelling instead.