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Unmanned Spaceflight.com _ Conferences and Broadcasts _ Spaceflight Collectors Resources

Posted by: PhilCo126 Oct 28 2005, 06:56 AM

For those interested in vintage & new publications, flown hardware, autographs etc... Visit the collectSpace.com website ( a great resource + forum ) wink.gif
www.collectspace.com

Posted by: PhilCo126 May 19 2006, 11:02 AM

Some other UMSF-related resources wink.gif

Lunar & Planetary globes: ohmy.gif
http://www.androidworld.com/prod64.htm

Mars terrains & huge Mars globe ohmy.gif
http://www.spacemodelsystems.com/

...
Feel free to add-on folks biggrin.gif

Posted by: DonPMitchell May 21 2006, 04:43 AM

You can get the Moon, Venus and Mars globes at Sky & Telescope (for much cheaper than the other sites). I own the Mars and Venus globes, they're not bad, although NASA's false color map of Venus is fugly.

There is also a British company that makes professional-quality globes: http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/greavesandthomas/. They can make globes from 12" to 43" diameter, although the very large ones are as much as $15,000. They will do a custom globe from a latitude/longitude image. Yeah, expensive, but be sure to check out their site.

Posted by: Bob Shaw May 21 2006, 11:22 AM

QUOTE (DonPMitchell @ May 21 2006, 05:43 AM) *
There is also a British company that makes professional-quality globes: http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/greavesandthomas/. They can make globes from 12" to 43" diameter, although the very large ones are as much as $15,000. They will do a custom globe from a latitude/longitude image. Yeah, expensive, but be sure to check out their site.


Don:

Greaves and Thomas also have the advantage of wild enthusiasm for globes in general, and a serious sense of humour - have a look at the company van!

Of particular interest to Soviet space researchers is their 'Maxwell-Pergamon' Lunar globe, based on an unissued early Soviet globe which was *meant* to have been distributed by the infamous Robert Maxwell.

They sell 'seconds' on eBay from time to time, where there's some slight flaw in a globe. These can be quite a lot cheaper.

http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/greavesandthomas/

Bob Shaw

Posted by: PhilCo126 May 21 2006, 03:23 PM

Mars panaromas:
http://www.moonpans.com/mars/

Posted by: DonPMitchell May 22 2006, 01:52 AM

QUOTE (PhilCo126 @ May 21 2006, 08:23 AM) *
Mars panaromas:
http://www.moonpans.com/mars/


I have a few space pictures up in my house. I get any of the MER panoramas at huge size for free from NASA: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/panoramas/


Then send them to these guys to be printed and framed: http://www.americanframe.com/artshop/digitalprinting/index.html?-session=sAFshop:42EB10851394d35B90GOlm41592E.

Posted by: PhilCo126 May 22 2006, 04:32 PM

Sure Don, photobox.co.uk is a similar service in Great Britain wink.gif
Some questions:
1. At which size do You print those panoramas ?
( I have the Pathfinder/Sojouner panorama which is almost 3 feet long )
2. Any other good photo-services ?

Posted by: DonPMitchell May 23 2006, 03:37 AM

QUOTE (PhilCo126 @ May 22 2006, 09:32 AM) *
Sure Don, photobox.co.uk is a similar service in Great Britain wink.gif
Some questions:
1. At which size do You print those panoramas ?
( I have the Pathfinder/Sojouner panorama which is almost 3 feet long )
2. Any other good photo-services ?


Most of these industrial sized color printers expect 72 pixels per inch. I resize the images in something that can do a windowed-sinc filter, such as the Lanczos filter in ACDSee. Photoshop, for some odd reason, still only has a bicubic filter which is not nearly as good. I don't let the printers do the image resizing, because god knows what they would use.

I haven't looked around at photo services much. They all have one of the 3 or 4-foot wide HP or Epson inkjet printers, which are fine. Even the cheap ones you buy for home use are remarkably good these days.

Posted by: PhilCo126 May 23 2006, 05:01 PM

Thanks for the update Don ... Photobox.co.uk uses FUJI photo-paper but I guess KODAK photo-paper is better ?

Posted by: ElkGroveDan May 23 2006, 08:22 PM

QUOTE (DonPMitchell @ May 22 2006, 07:37 PM) *
I resize the images in something that can do a windowed-sinc filter, such as the Lanczos filter in ACDSee. Photoshop, for some odd reason, still only has a bicubic filter which is not nearly as good.

There are Photoshop plugins available. Here's one that works pretty well -- supposedly based on the the same process as the Lanczos filter.

http://photoshop.pluginsworld.com/plugin.php?directory=adobe&software=photoshop&plugin=188

Posted by: PhilCo126 Nov 9 2006, 05:30 PM

Looks like they also started to make 'terrain models' of the other planets & moons
ohmy.gif
http://www.spacemodelsystems.com/terrains.html
cool.gif

Posted by: PhilCo126 Nov 11 2006, 10:44 AM

Some nice 'floating' globes ... yes they have Mars wink.gif
http://www.ledindon.com/objet-cadeau-solaire-nature/7111.php

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