
For this project, I struggled trying to find a way to encompass the complexities of PCOS in a simple and useful logo design. Eventually, I landed on a teal Venus (female) symbol surrounded by ten circles, with only one of those circles being filled with pink. The Venus symbol represents the idea of womanhood, since PCOS is an ailment that only affects women. The circles represent ten women, with the pink circle representing the one in ten women that are affected by PCOS. Finally, I chose teal to be the main color in the logo because teal is the color widely used for PCOS awareness and representation.
As far as research goes, I was looking for symbols that practically speak for themselves but are easy to recreate and identify. This is how I landed on the Venus symbol to represent how PCOS affects females. Originally, I was looking at ways to incorporate the silhouette of a woman, but felt that a Venus shape would get the same message across without over-complicating the design as a whole. I already knew from prior background research that PCOS affects 1 in every 10 women, so I chose to include this element as well since it seems so substantial.
When I began sketching my ideas for the logo this morning, I bounced between several ideas. At first, I tried sketching comic versions of a uterus to show that PCOS deals with the reproductive system, but nothing seemed to look or feel quite right with that idea. Next, I started sketching silhouettes to try and communicate a similar message, yet still became frustrated when the sketches turned out too busy or complicated. Finally, I regressed down to the widely known sign for women: Venus. When I first drew the sketch of my now complete logo, I felt that it was lacking some important element. After sitting down on Illustrator to actually create my logo, I realized that what was missing was color and balance (which illustrator will give you when your untrained artistic side will not).
For the actual synthesizing of my logo, I started with a blank web document on illustrator. I used the ellipse tool to create the main circle of the Venus symbol. I wanted the circle to be hollow, so I made the stroke to be 10 pts and left the fill empty. Next, I used the line segment tool to create the vertical and horizontal lines to cross one another and complete the shape of Venus. Once the main focus was established, I created a larger circle temporarily using the ellipse tool and placed this around the main shape. Then, I made a smaller circle and placed this on the temporary circle. I used the rotate tool to help place the same circle every 36 degrees since I wanted a total of ten circles. Once my circles were all placed, I made sure they each had a consistent stroke of 4 pts so that they weren’t too thick. Next, I deleted the temporary circle I had used for a guide and was left with a circle made of circles surrounding my main shape. Finally, I made the stroke and fill of one circle into a high-contrasting light pink.
Surprisingly, I didn’t face too many challenges with this logo project once I got past the concept stage. Coming up with an idea (even this simple) proved to be difficult for me, but I actually had fun bringing my sketch to life once I got onto illustrator.







