Southwest Unveils New Uniforms & “Widest 737 Economy Seat in the Market” w/ Bold Blue eLeather

by Adam

Southwest today unveiled its new employee-designed uniforms as well as the “widest 737 economy seat in the market”. Below is the full press release and pictures!

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest announces new Employee-designed uniforms

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest unveils 737-800 Heart interior

Southwest Airlines Co. is bringing the Heart of their Employees front and center with the announcement of the carrier’s first-ever Employee-designed uniforms and Boeing 737-800 aircraft Heart interior featuring the new Heart galley and seat.

“Introducing our new uniform designs and fully branded 737-800 Heart interiors into the fleet is an accomplishment directly resulting from our hardworking Employee design teams,” said Gary Kelly, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer for Southwest Airlines. “Southwest continues to enhance our unique brand that brings reliable comfort and outstanding Hospitality to 98 destinations in eight countries.”

Southwest first introduced the bold new look of its iconic brand in September 2014, unveiling a new logo, airport experience, and aircraft livery, Heart. Since then, the carrier continued this momentum with the roll out of the Heart brand, largely due to the hard work of Employee design teams and departments from across the Company.

New uniforms Designed by Employees for Employees

With the last complete redesign in 1996, Southwest has selected a new uniform designed by our very own Employees along with our partners at Cintas.

Southwest’s nearly 40,000 frontline Employees are anything but uniform, so it only made sense that a group of 43 vibrant individuals from Ground Ops, Inflight, Provisioning, Technical Operations, and Cargo departments discussed, debated, and designed with Fellow Employees in mind. Once the design was complete, more than 120 Employees across 37 cities tested pieces for fit and comfort, performance and functionality, durability, aesthetics, style, and ease of care.

“Our energetic Employees are the Heart of our airline, and they were the perfect choice to design and develop our new look,” said Sonya Lacore, Vice President Cabin Services and Executive Sponsor of the uniform redesign project. “Our brand, our planes, and our People are bold and modern, and the new uniform represents who our Employees are—spirited, professional, unique, and approachable.”

The new uniform collection embraces the brand colors with splashes of Bold Blue and pops of Signature Red. The final selections will now move into manufacturing, and all Employees will begin wearing the new uniform in mid-June 2017.

New Seats Join the Fleet

The new seat brings Customers additional space and comfort with more leg room. As the widest economy 737 seat, the bold blue seat features an adjustable headreast, enhanced back and bottom comfort, and more room to hold personal belongings.

The seats are upholstered in Southwest’s Bold Blue eLeather, a composition leather made of natural leather fibers. eLeather, which made its debut on Southwest aircraft in 2012, is manufactured using eco-friendly technology including state-of-the-art techniques which recycles 95 percent of the processed water and converts its own waste streams into energy, feeding back into the process.

Serving up Southwest Hospitality

A group of frontline Southwest Employees worked together to create a cutting-edge galley design, which will allow Flight Attendants to serve Customers even more efficiently than before. Unique in the airline industry, the transverse (aft) galley on our new 737-800 aircraft does not have carts (resulting in lighter weight), which means Flight Attendants can quickly prepare and serve Customers via trays—and our Customers can move about the cabin with ease once the seatbelt sign is off.

With the addition of the new G7 galley (located just past the forward-entry door), Flight Attendants will be able to more quickly accommodate Customers in the forward part of our new 737-800 aircraft. Additionally, new space in the forward galley area for required emergency equipment means more overhead bin space for Customers.

Currently, Southwest has three 737-800 aircraft with full Heart interiors flying in the system.  The carrier plans to have 28 by year’s end.

The responses below are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

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6 comments

MG June 20, 2016 - 3:22 pm

Typical fluff piece press release. “…..the widest economy 737 seat” yet it doesn’t specially say how wide.

At least the FA won’t look like dorks in khaki shorts and white tennis shoes anymore.

Reply
CKinSJ September 30, 2017 - 3:16 pm

I’m not sure what is gained by stating the width of seats. The width of the plane Is fixed and the aisles have to be a minimum width. The seats get what is left over.

Reply
woooo June 20, 2016 - 10:43 pm

omg the uniforms are ugly.

dress down everydays.

i would expect this from a budget airline, not a full service airline.

Reply
CKinSJ September 30, 2017 - 3:06 pm

People no longer know what nice clothes look like. Few people understand how good you look and feel in well made and tailored clothes. The standard now follows what is sold in big box stores or by on line organizations which started out discounting books.

Reply
Bill W September 17, 2018 - 1:09 pm

I flew on one of these puppies yesterday. The interior feels roomier than your run-of-the-mill 737. The seats are very comfortable even though they look like something you would find on a fancy subway car. As for the new uniforms… meh.

Reply
John Harper September 18, 2018 - 11:22 am

I also have mixed feelings about slim-line seats. You can’t really fake padding.

Reply

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