The couple, from Paterson, N.J., married since last September, said they wanted to make their first pride parade worthwhile. Their necks, miniature flags on poles stuck into the pockets of their shorts. Johan Barranco and her wife, Amelia Gonzalez, showed off the day’s haul of accessories: colorful rubber bracelets stacked to the elbow, dozens of beaded necklaces and lanyards hanging from On Fifth Avenue and 10th Street, floats from New York University, an animal-rights group and Mr. “It’s been a long day,” said Hunter Davidson, 21, a fashion major from Indiana University, “but it’s been fun.” In front of the Stonewall Inn in the West Village, marchers streamed past rainbow-colored balloons spelling out Pride. Seven hours after the parade started, it was still going strong. Dancers from Chutney Pride, a group for gays and lesbians of Caribbean descent, made a splash on Fifth Avenue.