Posts Tagged digital arts
Roundabout Rocket
I’ve featured Franco Brambilla once before, with his terrific alien-invaded vintage postcards. He was kind enough to point me to this image: a rocket in a roundabout? Indeed, the aliens have landed! (Maybe it’s a monument.)
West Coast Defense
Posted by Danielle in Computer & Internet, Entertainment, Picspam on August 21, 2009
I love Star Wars, so naturally this Flickr set of poster and wallpaper-quality pictures thrilled me to bits. (Not that I want the Imperial forces to invade San Francisco, of course… but the imagery is pretty darn awesome, I have to admit.) Get the whole set here!
Friday Picspam

So yeah, I decided Friday will be picspam day. We’re starting off today with a new release from HubbleSite, an artist’s concept of exoplanet HR 8799b. I love “space art”, especially art of distant planets, and the colors really grabbed me in this one.

This was a NASA Image of the Day earlier this week, and shows… well, I’ll let them tell you:
The boosters of the Soyuz rocket that transported Expedition 19 to the space station are shown here as the Soyuz TMA-14 spacecraft and boosters are assembled on March 23, 2009, at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The Soyuz successfully launched on March 26, carrying Expedition 19 Commander Gennady Padalka and Flight Engineer Mike Barratt, as well as a U.S. spaceflight participant [Charles Simonyi].

This last one is a bit more esoteric, picspam-wise: pleasurable to me, you may feel differently. I have a degree in geology and worked with data from a previous moon-mapping mission (Clementine), so seeing the first results from the Mini RF radar mapper currently orbiting the Moon thrilled me to bits. This image is of an impact crater near the North Pole of the moon, Rozhdestvensky K:
The crater Rozhdestvensky K is a moderately sized (42 km diameter) impact crater on the southern rim of the larger crater Rozhdestvensky, near the north pole of the Moon. These spectacular SAR images show massive slumping, as result of wall collapse caused by gravity. These images demonstrate that Mini-SAR images will be of great value in deciphering the geological evolution of the Moon.

The slumps are the lines curving opposite to the curve of the crater; basically, it’s like a landslide. But on the Moon. Er. Well. Here’s a more familiar-looking example (right). And here’s a page with illustrations and a good description because I’m sure you all totally care about this geology term and what it means. Eh, I’m a dork, but I’m *thorough*.
Oh, and by the way, that’s capital-M Moon. If you want to argue, click that link. If you’re a stickler and you want a good laugh, click that link.
And thus ends your picspam for this Friday!
Shuttles Are Fun.
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on January 30, 2009

A strange little image found on SpaceNews.jp, via Dark Roasted Blend.
Rocket Tiki
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on October 20, 2008

This may be, quite possibly the BEST Etsy find ever — the Rocket Tiki Googie Sign. (All of his “signs” are pretty great, actually.)
I present this series as a tongue-in-cheek tribute to the “Googie” form of art.
To The Moon Art Prints
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on October 6, 2008

A whimsical set of art prints, digitally illustrated in Utah. Cute, with a unique color scheme; add distinction to any wall!
Space Artwork
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on September 12, 2008

Space art is truly visionary, enabling us to experience vistas both real and unreal. Government agencies and private corporations pay artists to try and express that which we can’t see, that which doesn’t yet exist, that which we’ve only just discovered. These artists deserve link love, so in coming weeks I’ll be giving some out!

I’m kicking this series off with Tobias Roetsch, whose detailed illustrations of other worlds is beyond belief. Go to the gallery, pick an image, hit download to get a large version, and oggle at the beauty. This guy has one heck of an imagination, and his expressions thereof are simply breathtaking. Full of light, these pieces are dynamic and epic. There’s lots to see at his gallery, and plenty of wallpaper for download as well!

Lunar Landing Pod Tin Toy Art Print
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on July 7, 2008

New art in an old style, via Etsy:
John W. Golden’s rendition of Golden Age Sci-fi Rocket Tin Toy box art. This is a reproduction of a digital image created by John W. Golden.
“I didn’t want to reproduce actual artwork or use an actual tin toy robot as the basis, because I wanted the freedom to interpret this my way. The series has been a lot of fun, because I had to come up with a fictional toy company, fictional robots, etc.”
Image is 8″x 12″, unmatted, and is reproduced on Enhanced Matte Paper using Archival inks.
Rocket Art Prints
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture, Home & Office on June 30, 2008

These colorful prints are an Etsy find. Great vintage look to them!
A set of retro-style rockets named the Comet, the Solar Streak, the Japanese Star and the Red Cruiser. Image is digitally created and reproduced on archival paper. Image size is 9.25″x4″.






This blog celebrates space exploration, human spaceflight and the heavens, through
My name is Danielle Signor, and I am a space cadet. 









