PSQ Delivery Icon Lab
Three new line icons for the PSQ delivery-method pills: Oral Drops, Troche, and Topical. Shown against the existing capsule / injection / wind set and matched to its style. Pick a mark per method, see it in the real pill, stress-test it, and export.
In context :: PSQ recommendation pills
Delivery-method pills
Existing set on the left (injection + oral are the existing EllieMD icons; capsule + wind are style-matched reconstructions), then the three new marks (+). They should optically match the set: same weight, same footprint.
On a recommended product
[Product Name]
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[Product Name]
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[Product Name]
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Step 1 :: Pick one mark per method
Icon candidates
Oral Drops
Liquid taken by mouth (currently borrowing the wind icon). A drop or dropper reads instantly.
Single Drop
One clean droplet
The simplest, most legible mark at pill size. Unmistakably "drops" and the closest weight-match to the existing set. Safest pick to replace the wind stand-in.
Two Drops
Paired droplets
Two drops read as "drops" (plural) more explicitly than one, matching the "Oral Drops" label. Slightly busier at small sizes.
Dropper
Pipette + drop
The most descriptive of the dosing form (a tincture dropper), and a sibling to the real master oral icon. Most detail, so it needs the most stroke care when small.
Troche
A small medicated lozenge that dissolves in the mouth. Reads as a flat scored tablet.
Lozenge
Oval troche, scored
An oval tablet with a center score is the most literal troche read and stays distinct from the round capsule mark. Best style-match for the set.
Round Troche
Circular tablet, scored
A round scored tablet. Cleanest geometry, but at a glance can read close to a generic pill, so it leans on the label.
Soft Tablet
Rounded-square troche
A soft rounded-square tablet (some troches are molded square). Most differentiated shape, furthest from the capsule and disc reads.
Topical
Cream or ointment applied to the skin. A tube or jar communicates "apply", not "swallow".
Cream Tube
Squeeze tube + cap
A capped squeeze tube is the universal sign for a topical cream and stays clearly distinct from the oral and injection marks. Strongest, most recognizable pick.
Cream Jar
Lidded jar of cream
A wide lidded jar reads as a topical balm or moisturizer. Lower, wider footprint than the rest of the set, which makes it easy to tell apart.
Dab on Skin
Dollop applied to skin
A dollop of cream sitting on the skin line shows the action of applying, not the container. Most conceptual, so the read depends on the label most.
Step 2 :: Verify the style match
Side by side with the existing set
Existing set on the left (Real = the existing EllieMD icons, Recon = redrawn in the EllieMD style), the new marks on the right. They should sit at the same weight and footprint.
Step 3 :: Stress-test a mark
Oral Drops: size, stroke & contrast
Size ramp
Stroke ramp (at 32px)
Contrast
Step 4 :: Export & hand off
Export the marks
Format
Sizes (px)
Color
Source :: Oral Drops (Single Drop)
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="24" height="24" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="currentColor" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" role="img" aria-label="Oral Drops"> <title>Oral Drops</title> <path d="M12 3.2c-3 5-6 7.8-6 11.3a6 6 0 0 0 12 0c0-3.5-3-6.3-6-11.3Z" /><path d="M9.6 15.4a2.5 2.5 0 0 0 1.7 2.3" /> </svg>
Chosen = 3 icons x 1 size x 2 formats = 6 files. All candidates = 18 files. Bundled with svg/ and png/ folders.
Spec:EllieMD's delivery-form icons are custom hand-drawn line marks: ~24 viewBox, 2px stroke, round caps, #333333 inline / #025B5B teal on the pills. SVG with currentColor is the cleanest handoff so the new marks inherit the teal like the rest. Injection + oral here are the existing EllieMD icons; capsule + wind are style-matched reconstructions pending the existing source.