About two months ago, I advertised that fact I was giving away four free hours of studio and design time to any charity, anywhere that needed it. To say I was overwhelmed with the response would be an understatement.
At one point I had it in my head that we had, in Canada, over 60,000 registered charities and nfp’s. But according to Imagine Canada, we have over 161,000… that’s incredible. We all know about the big ones of course, they act big, they spend big, and well, they are big. BUT, using the 80/20 rule we can assume that the majority of those 161,000 charities are small. They are run by volunteers, they have no budgets, and are being run by people just trying to do the best they can.
I’m not pretending to be some sort of charitable Robin Hood, as striking as I would look in a leotard, but I take great satisfaction that I work with some of the best agencies and fundraising consultants in the world, and every time I work with a new client, especially the small ones, I can bring all the knowledge and resources I have to the discussion. If they want it.
Mark and I have discussed many a time, that we would love to be able to donate all of our time, resources and knowledge to charities anywhere for free – basically operate as a nfp design studio – but we need to make a living somehow right?
So – anyhow, back to Blue Beauty.

As I went through all of the emails that I received, one was from a woman named Candy Silvasy from Cincinnati.
“Spa4Diabetes is partnered with the United Nations’ Int’l Diabetes Federation, we raise money and awareness for the global diabetes epidemic. Our BlueBeauty initiative seeks to encourage recognition, prevention and self care as the pink ribbon does for breast cancer.”
Candy needed some help coming up with a professional identity for the Blue Beauty initiative.
The problem for me is that it is impossible to design a logo in the course of four hours. I’ve discussed my process before here and here. But I liked the challenge, the cause and Candy had a real passion for what she was doing.
After reviewing her answers to my questionnaire that I use for new logo design projects, I sat down and got to work.
Two key things that stood out to me were Blue Beauty’s target market and demographics. She was targeting spas, beauty manufactures, upscale hotels and women who would generally partake in Blue Beauty spa treatments or buy the products. Age range of 18-35, upper middle class.
Candy explained: “BlueBeauty has taken off so rapidly that companies, including beauty manufacturers, are contacting us to participate. We need a high impact, recognizable logo for BlueBeauty that will motivate companies to create and customers to buy BlueBeauty branded goods. I want it to be the young, fresh, modern look of diabetes. Someone told me recently, that diabetes is not a glamorous disease – the pink ribbon, the Red Dress campaign of the American Heart Assn. have done that for their causes. Though no disease is glamorous – I want this logo to put our BlueBeauty Initiative on the map as the way that diabetes stays top of women’s minds and gets them excited to do something about stopping it.”
So the challenge was clear.
Doing some research was in order.
Candy was right. Breast Cancer has the pink ribbon, Heart and Stroke has their heart, Lung Association has their cross… what does diabetes have? What sort of visual clichés did that section of the sector use to represent themselves.
Well the colour blue kept coming up (which was going to work well considering the name) and the circle also kept popping up. I also discovered that the International Diabetes Federation has started a global campaign to come up with a symbol for diabetes.




So that was settled. I knew I couldn’t ignore it for the sake of being different. As a logo designer I have acknowledged that fact that visual clichés are clichés for a reason. It would be stupid to ignore it. The challenge is always using the cliché in a new, original way.
But there was second piece to this. Giving the logo a upscale spa look.
We’ve all seen those before.



I had the colour blue. I had the circle. I had striking type. I had water.
Now what? Well as usual for me, I started with the type.
There were two faces that stood out pretty quickly. One was called Sparrowhawk and the other was called BauderieScript. They had the qualities I was looking for. Soft and feminine shapes, uniqueness, upscale but not perfect.

Ordinarily I would present two to three ideas, all in black. But in this case, Candy and I knew that we would always have to use the colour blue, so using these two faces I presented Candy with two concepts:

The first one I wanted to keep keep that idea, or cliché of calming water, as well, the roundness of the characters worked to the round circle of diabetes. It was striking and upscale.
The second one, I really wanted to do the blue circle but – not the blue circle. The type was great because it was imperfect. It had flow, it was natural… and I wanted it to feel like it was part of a pool of water.
Candy decided pretty quickly that she really liked option number two and I went ahead and finalized the art direction and cleaned up the concept to work in a number different formats.

“John created the logo for our non-profit’s main initiative. What impressed me so much, was John’s thorough and enthusiastic interest in what we’re doing. His research and creativity meshed to produce the ideal logo that’s not only aesthetically beautiful, but also on target with helping Spa4Diabetes reach it’s goals. Thanks so much John and we look forward to working with you in the future!“


It was interesting to read and hear about the process you go through when designing and creating a new logo. It really shows that you put a lot of thought into the process. I’ve seen you in action as you come up with creative options for new logos for many different organizations. You can tell that you really enjoy it and are really good at it. Well done!
Thanks for your comments Tara. I will admit that my process was slightly truncated for this logo but it kept me very focused all the way through as well.
What really stood out to me was the diabetes didn’t have a symbol. I guess there is a first far everything.
Sorry i meant a first FOR everything.
Thanks for coming by and reading this old post Caitlyn! How did you even find it? Cheers. John
Hey John. I was browsing diabetes symbols as I am trying to find a suitable but attractive design to have tattooed. This is to remind myself to look after my diabetes and also so people and medical staff would realise I had the disease. It was really interesting looking at your process as I love graphic design, and you have inspired me to design my own! Thanks.
Georgia! Thank you so much for your comment. if i can help design your tattoo that would be awesome! let me know – but even if i can i am so please to have inspired you. thanks for popping in!