Breast Cancer Pink Ribbon Logo

Pink ribbons for breast cancer logo of hope, healing, and support from friends, family, breast cancer survivors and patients. October is Awareness Month, breast cancer and pink ribbons are worn by people.

The disease attacks any person without a cause. Whether you're male or female. It can happen to children as young as ten years. Race, age, gender does not matter. One in eight die from the disease. Whether directly or indirectly we are all affected by it.

The pink ribbon was adopted as the official logo of the National Awareness Month breast cancer the following year in 1992. The pink ribbon is derived from the popular red ribbon to raise awareness about AIDS. A ribbon of pink and blue are sometimes used to logoize breast cancer in men, which is relatively rare. The pink ribbon and blue was designed in 1996 by Nancy Nick, President and Founder of the John W. Nick to raise awareness that "Men have breast cancer too!" 

The pink is considered feminine in modern Western countries. It evokes the traditional roles of female gender, care for others, be beautiful, be good and be cooperative. 

The pink ribbon is the fear of breast cancer, hope for the future of charity and goodness of people and companies that publicly support the breast cancer movement. It is intended to evoke solidarity with women currently have breast cancer.

Breast cancer organizations use the pink ribbon to be associated with breast cancer, to promote breast cancer awareness and to support fundraising. Some related to breast cancer organizations, such as Pink Ribbon International, use the pink ribbon as a main logo. Susan G. Komen for the Cure uses a stylized "treadmill" as its logo.

While specifically representing the breast cancer awareness, pink ribbon is a logo and an indicator of good will toward women in general. Purchase, use, display, or sponsor signs pink ribbons that the person or company who cares about women. The pink ribbon is a brand marketing for companies that allowed women to promote and identify themselves as being socially conscious. Compared with the problems of other women, promote awareness of breast cancer is politically safe.


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