2. We need to continue to use the circle tool and press Alt+Shift to draw a small circle from the center point, taking the interior of the cherry blossom as the standard. Similarly, draw a slightly larger circle based on the outside of cherry petals, and fill two circles with purple strokes, as shown below.
3. We need to select the polar grid tool, click the left mouse button in the blank space of the canvas, and set the width/height as 100mm, the number of concentric separation lines as 0, and the number of radial separation lines as 10 in the pop-up polar grid tool option window, and click.
4. We need to move the created polar grid to the reference map, slightly enlarge it, and adjust its color to blue to distinguish it. Select all objects, copy and move to the right, delete background reference pictures, select all reference lines, and execute the menu View >; Reference line >; Establish reference line "command, and execute the menu" view >; Reference line >; Lock reference line "command, create it as a reference line and lock it for subsequent drawing marks, as shown in the figure below.
5. We use the Rectangle Tool to draw a rectangle at the drawn reference line and fill it with dark green consistent with the background of the reference picture, as shown in the following figure.
6. First of all, logo consists of five parts. Take a part as an example to decompose. The figure mainly determines three key points and adjusts the arc, as shown in the figure below.
7. When drawing, we only need to draw the left half of the arc. Others can be cut out by copying Boolean operations. Use the pen tool to draw the left half of the arc on the corresponding two key points on the reference line. Here you can start drawing from the key point in the middle, as shown in the figure below.
8. After adjustment, make the right half of the graph, select the mirror tool, hold down the Alt key on the center line of the reference line, and click it. In the pop-up mirror panel, select vertical mode, click the copy button to copy one and change it to blue. For better distinction and observation, you can change the opacity of the two graphs to 50%, as shown in the following figure.
9. Select the blue figure, use the rotation tool, hold down the Alt key and click the center point of the reference line. In the rotation panel that pops up, set the angle to -72 degrees, and click OK to rotate, as shown in the figure below. Then select two shapes and click the "Union" button in the shape mode in the Path Finder to create a composite shape, as shown in the following figure.
10. Draw a circle and fill it with green to reduce the transparency, as shown below. Then select the circle and the drawn blue figure, and click the "Intersection" button in "Shape Mode" in the Path Finder to get the intersection of the two figures, as shown in the following figure. Use the rotation tool again to copy the -72-degree cutting pattern and fill it in red, as shown in the figure below.
1 1. First, select two figures, and perform subtraction again in Path Finder to get the shape, as shown in the following figure. Secondly, it is found that the right arc is too stiff after cutting. Using the small white arrow, select two vertices at the arc and adjust the arc to be too smooth, as shown in the following figure.
Then select the drawn graph and copy several other graphs with the Rotation Tool in the same way, as shown in the following figure. Immediately after observation, it is found that there will be a little more intersection between every two figures at this time. Continue mediation, select any two graphics and change them to red, as shown in the figure below. Finally, execute the "Split" command in Path Finder to split it, and delete the rest after splitting, leaving a graph we need, as shown in the following figure.
12. Finally, add a gradient color to the drawn graph, as shown in the figure below. Then use the "rotation tool" to copy and get the effect, as shown in the figure below. At this point, the whole production is completed.