

vivaair01 |
Viva's logo looks like a drunken snail climbing a hill.
Thanks to Jürgen Klein. (1999) |


voegol01 |
Perhaps this airline's management knows that their firm's name sounds
like Voegel ("bird" in German)?
Thanks to Homer Goetz (2007) |


voegol02 |
It takes a real specialist to see the difference
between this bag and Voegol's previous offering. The orange rectangles are
about half a centimetre narrower, and the text has been retypeset - check
the shape of the cedillas in "indisposição" if
you don't believe me. |


volar01 |
Either the V has sprouted a single wing, or a lot of ink has been smeared
in its wake.
This is a small Spanish carrier, but you wouldn't think so from looking
at its bags: they are made of plastic, much more like those in Latin
America.
Thanks to Steve Silberberg. (2005) |
 volare01 |
Volare's logotype features a stylized bird flapping through it: a
design repeated in an enlarged form on this pretty two-tone bag. With a
little imagination,
the designer could have had wings flapping through the word
"Airsicknessbag" at the top, too. Thanks to Bruce Kelly. (2000) |
 volaregroup01 |
Used by Volare Airlines and Air Europe from February
2002. Logo features a plane chasing its own tail. Thanks to Moreno Borriero (2002) |
|

 volaregroup02 |
Poorer quality printing. The Volare plane is still performing acrobatics.
Thanks to Janusz
Tichoniuk (2004) |
| |
Vomit
Comet: See KC-135 |


vueling01 |
A bird (?) made of
dots, with a yellow yolk instead of an eye. Anyone got any other
interpretation of this enigmatic logo?
Thanks to Cedrick Gauthier-Lacognata. |