Osmotic-swelling experiments were conducted on a variety of preparations of "uniform" unilamellar vesicle systems. The synthetic lipid preparations included both vesicles produced by extrusion through polycarbonate ultrafiltration membranes and vesicles produced by the pH-adjustment method. The vesicles were monitored by photon correlation spectroscopy during swelling as the osmolarity of the external solution was decreased. Contrary to our previously reported results [Aurora, T. S., Li, W., Cummins, H. Z., & Haines, T. H. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 820, 250-258; Li, W., & Haines, T. H. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7477-7483; Li, W., Aurora, T. S., Haines, T. H., & Cummins, H. Z. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 8220-8229; Haines, T. H., Li, W., Green, M., & Cummins, H. Z. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 5439-5447] large unilamellar vesicles produced from acidic lipids by the pH-adjustment technique were highly polydisperse and did not swell in a manner that permitted the computation of a Young's modulus, presumably due to the polydispersity. Also contrary to our previous reports, membranes derived from bovine submitochondrial particles did not produce evidence of swelling when subjected to similar protocols. Analysis of osmotic swelling of extruded unilamellar vesicles has allowed us to assign Young's moduli for bilayers of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol, in the range (5-8) x 10(8) and (3-6) x 10(8) dyn/cm2, respectively. The diameters and polydispersites obtained with electron microscopy and photon correlation spectroscopy were compared directly and with computer-modeling techniques. While excellent agreement was obtained for distributions with low polydispersity (approximately greater than 0.1), serious disagreement was found when the polydispersity exceeded approximately 0.2.