This is an archival story that predates current editorial management.
This archival content was written, edited, and published prior to LAist's acquisition by its current owner, Southern California Public Radio ("SCPR"). Content, such as language choice and subject matter, in archival articles therefore may not align with SCPR's current editorial standards. To learn more about those standards and why we make this distinction, please click here.
Check Out These Retro-Style NASA Space Travel Posters
Interplanetary space travel is still at least a few decades away, but NASA has already sold us on galactic tourism with this beautiful set of retro-style posters.
Pasadena's own Jet Propulsion Laboratory has released a rather handsome set of 14 posters that sell the possibility of such travel, with familiar locales such as Mars and our own planet, and far flung reaches like 51 Pegasi b and Kepler-16b, which has twin suns like Star Wars' Tatooine. And while we can only speculate how visiting such places would go, it's fun to see whimsical jaunts on the posters like skydiving onto HD 40307g and taking a hot air balloon on Jupiter.
The posters were designed by The Studio at JPL (JPL has an in-house design team—who knew?) and were clearly modeled on the iconic WPA National Park posters.
The best part of all? The Visions of the Future set is available for free as high-quality files that you can download and make your own posters and prints. JPL says they'll be available for sale from their online store, but at the moment only three sets of postcards are available.
-
Donald Trump was a fading TV presence when the WGA strike put a dent in network schedules.
-
Pickets are being held outside at movie and TV studios across the city
-
For some critics, this feels less like a momentous departure and more like a footnote.
-
Disneyland's famous "Fantasmic!" show came to a sudden end when its 45-foot animatronic dragon — Maleficent — burst into flames.
-
Leads Ali Wong and Steven Yeun issue a joint statement along with show creator Lee Sung Jin.
-
Every two years, Desert X presents site-specific outdoor installations throughout the Coachella Valley. Two Los Angeles artists have new work on display.