The range runs from entry-level heart and brain shapes at the lowest price points through to specialist organ, skeletal, and sensory forms. Heart shapes come in several variants including symbolic squeeze forms and an anatomical heart with veins for clinical audiences. Brain shapes cover a standard and a coloured version suited to different campaign contexts. Tooth shapes, bone and hip bone forms, and skeletal shapes including spine and vertebra cover the structural and dental category. Sensory and external body shapes include ear, eye, nose, lips, foot, hand, thumbs up, and strong arm forms. All shapes are soft PU foam with the logo on the flat face using printing or full colour digital print. Heart, tooth, and brain shapes are the most ordered across the range.
A tooth shape at a dental clinic's patient event, a heart shape at a cardiac health conference, or a brain shape at a consultancy's client day communicates the sector before anyone looks at the logo. That's what makes body part shapes a stronger choice for health and wellness campaigns than a standard round ball. The shape does the sector identification that a round ball can't.
Heart shapes are the most ordered and come in more variants than any other shape. The entry-level squeeze form in bright red has express service and the lowest price point; the anatomical version suits clinical settings where form accuracy matters.
Good to Know
What is the difference between the heart variants in this range?
The entry-level heart squeeze form is a symbolic shape in bright red with express service, suited to high-volume health awareness campaigns and event giveaways. The anatomical heart with veins is a more detailed clinical form suited to cardiology clinics and pharmaceutical campaigns where a realistic organ representation is appropriate.
Which body part shapes suit a dental practice?
Tooth shapes are the default choice for dental practices, orthodontists, and dental suppliers because the form is immediately legible to a dental audience without any supporting copy. The dental plate shape suits prosthodontists and laboratory suppliers, and both styles are available from 100 units.
Do body part shapes work for health awareness campaigns as well as clinical settings?
Heart shapes work well for cardiac health awareness campaigns where the symbolic form connects to the message, and brain shapes work for mental health awareness events and cognitive health campaigns. Tooth shapes suit dental hygiene education programmes and community health events.
Can full colour digital print be used on organic body part shapes?
Full colour digital print is available on most shapes and handles multi-colour logos and detailed artwork on the flat face. On highly contoured shapes including lungs, kidneys, and livers the effective print area may be smaller than on simpler heart or tooth forms, so checking dimensions before finalising artwork is worthwhile for detailed logos.