Corvette - Trademark Pattern Corvette (CORVETTE) is the trademark of a high-end sports car produced by the Chevrolet Department of General Motors of the United States. It follows the name of a British gunboat in the 17th century and is intended to refer to the popular British sports car at that time. challenge. The trademark pattern is two flags nested cross inside an oval. The black and white flag indicates that the car is a sports car participating in the road car competition; the bow trademark on the red flag indicates that the car is manufactured by the Chevrolet Division, and the trophy and flowers on the flag represent the victory after winning the championship. A commemoration of cheers and success; "CORVETTE" on the top represents the name; "1953" on the lower left represents the birth year of the "Corvette" car. Since the day "Corvette" was born, it has been selling well all over the world for its extraordinary charm and unique style. It is a representative of American automotive engineering art. In 1957, Earle designed the unique "shark mouth" radiator grille; in 1963, Pierre designed the split rear window, making it one of the most enviable treasures of sports car collectors; in 1968, Pierre designed The "peak-waisted Coke bottle"-shaped body designed by Er, the long hood with smooth contours, and the sparkling side wings can be called an art treasure. In the mid-1980s, in order to highlight the two flags on the Corvette trademark, the words and outer circles were removed, and what emerged was a simple and bright new "Corvette" trademark.