Special
Liveries
Heritage ◆ These liveries are retired alongside the Boeing 737. They are preserved here as part of the Skyward Air Virtual visual heritage collection. · See also: Heritage & History Page
Retired
The most distinctive of the three special editions, Dark Synth takes the jet black base into full retro-synthwave territory. A sweeping teal-to-purple gradient tail, a vivid magenta pink cheatline running the full fuselage length, and dual-tone titles — cyan "SKYWARD" paired with electric blue "AIR" — give this livery an unmistakable after-dark energy. The north star compass logo on the tail completes a look that feels equal parts aviation and neon skyline.
Dark Synth was created during the experimental 737 era as a showcase of what Skyward Air's visual identity could become — bold, unconventional, and impossible to miss on any ramp.
Retired
Inspired by the iconic grid-race aesthetic of Tron, Red Blaze takes the blackout fuselage in a more aggressive, high-contrast direction. Glowing red-orange cheatlines trace the length of the aircraft like circuitry under tension. Bold red "SKYWARD AIR" titles burn against the matte black, red winglets cut sharp angles in the air, and the tail carries a stylised pilot figure outlined in red — a motif that reads like a neon sign on a dark highway.
Of the three special liveries, Red Blaze carries the most intensity. It anticipates the crimson direction Skyward would eventually commit to with the current house colours — though in a rawer, more electric form.
Retired
The cooler-headed sibling of Red Blaze, Blue Strike takes the same Tron-inspired grid aesthetic and channels it through cyan and teal. Circuit-board cheatlines glow against the black fuselage in precise parallel lines. Cyan "SKYWARD AIR" titles run clean and bright along the cabin. Teal winglets catch the light from any angle. The same pilot figure tail logo appears here in cyan outline — cleaner, more technical, and almost architectural in feel.
Blue Strike is the most refined of the three special liveries. Where Dark Synth revels in colour contrast and Red Blaze burns with aggression, Blue Strike feels deliberate and precise — a hint of what a Skyward Air technical or cargo division might have looked like had the airline taken a different path.