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British Airways Olympics dove plane unveiled..

Started by Smudger98, April 03, 2012, 08:49:56 AM

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Smudger98

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17565838

Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Well, actually, it's a plane painted to look like a bird.

British Airways has repainted the first of nine A319s with a dove design to mark the London 2012 Olympics.

The artwork by Brighton-based designer Pascal Anson will be seen for the first time on BA's 1420 Heathrow to Copenhagen flight on Tuesday.

The design is the result of a contest, run by the company with the aim of promoting British talent in the run up to the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Turner prize-nominated artist Tracey Emin was on the judging panel which picked Mr Anson's design from hundreds of entries last July, and she has mentored the Kingston University design tutor throughout the project.
Pascal Anton Three dimensional designer Pascal Anson said he wanted to turn a plane - which people nowadays took for granted - into something extraordinary

Inspired by planes he saw flying in and out of Gatwick during his commute, Anson said that as a three-dimensional designer, he wanted to turn something ordinary into something extraordinary, while playing with people's perceptions of flying objects.

"I wanted to do something that would make people stop and think differently about what they were looking at," he told the BBC.

"I've often looked up at aircraft landing and wondered if it's a bird or a plane, and the idea developed from there."

He chose the dove because as well as being a symbol of peace and social unity, it was used in ancient Olympics as a messenger to send Games reports to outlying villages, and the bird also played a role in Olympics ceremonies such as that at the last London Games in 1948.
Pascal Anton with Tracey Emin Tracy Emin mentored Pascal Anson throughout the project

Although Anson wanted to avoid creating a photographic representation of a bird, he did want the design to be dove-like, which meant BA for the first time has painted the whole of the plane's livery, rather than just its tail-fin.

This created both design and artistic challenges, in terms of scale - as a dove is 500 times smaller than the A319 - and surface, in terms of trying to get the soft lines of the dove's feathers onto the hard metallic surface of the plane.

He wanted to use a metallic colour but metallic paints are not allowed on aircraft as they interfere with radar signal so a new mica resin was mixed to give the bright gold finish - a colour which the team have dubbed "dove gold".

BA's operations manager for external appearance, David Barnes, said the job was the most complex his team had undertaken - both because of the intricacy of the design, and the fact that it encompassed the whole plane.

But how do you paint a plane?

What does it take to paint an A319?

    10 painters
    950 man hours
    500 litres of paint

Even though the A319 is one of the smaller aircraft in BA's fleet - a 747 would need nearly 2,000 litres of paint - it was not a straightforward task.

It took a 10-strong team working around the clock, 950 man hours to paint the plane - which is 33.8m (111 feet) long and has a 34m wingspan - in a massive hangar in Heathrow, said Mr Barnes.

White-overalled technicians with goggles, masks and harnesses used hydraulic jetties to move around the craft and apply 500 litres of paint with spray-guns.
Continue reading the main story
London 2012 - One extraordinary year
London 2012 One extraordinary year graphic

    The BBC's home of 2012: Latest Olympic news, sport, culture, torch relay, video and audio

Unlike other airlines which use sticky vinyl to adorn their livery, BA creates massive stencils and then applies paint - which creates a longer-lasting finish to the design.

Having stripped the plane's paint back to the metal, a primer is applied, followed by a grey base paint on which a layer of fine rubber beads are sprayed to give a sparkly appearance before the top coat of paint is applied.

In terms of design, the designer works on a model which is then scaled up by 50 times and split into sections, rather like a jigsaw, so that stencil outlines can be created and pasted onto the aircraft.

While Mr Barnes said it had been hard work creating the new colour, which has to comply with Civil Aviation Authority regulations, he said it made a change for his team to work with something other than red, white and blue.
Plane being painted It took a 10-strong team 950 man hours to paint the A319 - which carries 132 passengers and is one of the smaller passenger planes in BA's fleet

"This is the first time we've painted the whole craft and I'm really excited by it," said Mr Barnes. "When people see it they're going to want to fly in it."

But the new design won't be totally unfamiliar, as the airline is retaining the Chatham Dockyard Union flag - named after the dockyard where all Royal navy flags used to be made - on its tail.

BA had incurred the wrath of Margaret Thatcher in 1997 when it redesigned the tailfins without the historic flag. The former Prime Minister threw a handkerchief over a model 747 showing off the new livery and scoffed: "We fly the British flag, not these awful things."

Anson hopes the response to his latest design will be more positive. He told the BBC he was looking forward to seeing the final design when the last bit of masking tape was removed, and was proud to spray-paint his signature on the side of the plane.

Asked what he wanted to do next, he said a book and TV series were in the pipeline, and joked that maybe having worked on something so big he would scale his art down - and perhaps design artwork on the head of pin.

C/O- http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17565838
Tomorrow is not Guaranteed  - So make the most of to-day !!!
SBS-1 User and a Tecno Numpty !!

Bethsalem

"I've often looked up at aircraft landing and wondered if it's a bird or a plane...."

Frankly, when I see a plane landing it never reminds me of the gracefulness of a swan gently contacting the water, or the majesty of an eagle alighting on a high tree branch. I just think, "Will BMI baby ever replace their 737s?"

So, all thing things being considered, I'll have whatever he's been taking  :)

On a more serious note. Would it be better if BA stopped wasting money on costly gimmicks that are no use to neither man nor beast and say, oh I don't know, introduced "Olympic" fares, maybe which were 20.12% cheaper than normal?

Just a thought!


Sun Worshipper

That's awful, it looks like a bird has deposited what a bid can, on a nice white aircraft.

Mind you, having read that Tracey Emmin was one of the judges, all became clear ;D

mhm

Mike Colon Cancer Survivor for the Time Being.
Fides In Tenebris.

Sun Worshipper

Reminds me of the colours adopted by an ANA Boeing 737.......totally anonymous!

Smudger98

Even worse news...  there is according to the grape vine another 8 to come yet..!!  awful.. horrid..  nightmare..
Tomorrow is not Guaranteed  - So make the most of to-day !!!
SBS-1 User and a Tecno Numpty !!


Bethsalem

#7
Well, that picture on airliners.net just about sums up why we'll all just be glad when the Olympics are over.

Maybe it's just me, but I've never liked diarrhea-brown in a colour scheme.