Illustration & Logo for women in environment work

Illustration & Logo for women in environment work

The Haribon Foundation asked me to design a social media template for their project focused on bringing more women to forest management positions and leadership.

For the social media cards, I decided to use a nature or leaf motif that utilized leaves, flowers, and branches of plants native to the Philippines. I share more about that in this blog post.

Philippine native tree leaf motif for social media posts

For Women’s Month, Haribon asked for a slightly updated template that highlighted the occasion. So I illustrated a group of women for the template.

Illustration of women holding women's month sign.
Womens Month social media template

Lastly, I’d like to share the logo I had made for the project. After a few studies portraying nature and women in various ways, the team chose this logo.

Logo for women working in environment

The leaf is inspired by the leaf of the National Tree of the Philippines: the Narra, or Pterocarpus indicus.

Botanical illustration plate from Manuel Blanco's Flora de Filipinas, 1837
Botanical illustration plate from Manuel Blanco’s Flora de Filipinas, 1837.

Haribon’s Women GO project is formally entitled “Enhancing the Role of Women in Protected Area Governance for Social Change.”

It aims to increase the influence of rural women in Protected Area (PA) governance in the Southern Sierra Madre, particularly in Mt. Irid-Angelo. The mountain is actually made of two mountains that hold within them 135,257 hectares of forest. It is also home to the Dumagat-Remontado tribe, and has 17 watersheds, four of which provide water for domestic and industrial use to its neighboring municipalities.

View facing Southern Sierra Madre Mt. Irid-Angelo from Quezon Province
View facing Southern Sierra Madre Mt. Irid-Angelo from Quezon Province. Photo from Haribon Foundation.

The project seeks to empower women and highlight their role not only in ensuring family and community well-being, but also in natural resource management, which includes managing environmental risks, reducing vulnerabilities, and improving climate resiliency.

Learn more about the project at the Haribon Foundation website.

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I share a bit more about this project in a Patreon post for supporters of my art. If you like my art and these kinds of updates, do consider being a Patron. You can become one for as little as $1 or P50 pesos a month.

Visit my Patreon page here.