An operator or owner may apply different designs, symbols, notations, graphics, and other identifiers on the aircraft body to create an aircraft livery. Aircraft liveries changed and became a subset of aircraft that represented the identity of the person or organization. On a new aircraft, Airbus and Boeing will paint a three-color paint scheme gratis; each additional color will cost the carrier money. Remember that White is the lightest color and that an aircraft’s weight immediately correlates to its fuel consumption, which in turn directly correlates to its profitability. In many ways, airline liveries are highly significant, and they give passengers a glimpse inside the airline and a crucial first impression. Compared to normal offline and internet advertising, aircraft liveries are a great medium to communicate with the customers. Special liveries are an effort that should never be disregarded, especially when immediate benefits have been realized. We can only anticipate future skies that will be even more artistic and captivating. The title of the airline is typically written in a certain way. This is precisely what typographic designers refer to as a logotype. The specification includes typeface, type size, type case (capitals or “uppercase,” upper and lowercase, lowercase only), cut (Romans or upright letters, italics or slanted letters, regular/condensed/expanded type), weight (bold, medium, light), and proportion. Typefaces must be commercially available or specially designed and copyrighted custom typefaces (defined as units of tight or loose setting, plus amount and degree of type kerning). Each member of the fleet has a different size, and larger planes have greater titles. Airlines’ livery type is frequently altered to accommodate curved aircraft surfaces because it is typically designed to be read from a flat surface. Graphic designers define the monogram or emblem of the airline in terms of geometry. The specification that results is known as a logo