Description: APOLLO 7 RESTORED FLIGHT IMAGES COLLECTION & EXCLUSIVE FILM WITH WALT CUNNINGHAM Apollospace® proudly presents the most comprehensive collection of fully restored and enhanced Apollo 7 flight images at the highest quality and resolution availablePlus exclusive documentary featuring Apollo 7 Astronaut Walt Cunningham! Apollo 7, the first manned Apollo mission to fly This special commemorative Apollo 7 50th Anniversary USB flash drive contains the complete catalog of every photograph taken by the Apollo 7 astronauts during this historic mission - fully restored and enhanced at the highest quality and resolution available anywhere! Each JPEG image on this commemorative USB collection measures 5000 x 5000 pixels at 300 dpi. The individual image files on this USB are huge - averaging over 20 megabytes in size each.The 539 flight images contained on this USB together total more than 11 gigabytes in size ... That's enough to fill 3 DVDS!And on top of the highest quality and resolution Apollo 7 images you get our exclusive film with Apollo 7 Astronaut Walt Cunningham, "Apollo 7 in Pictures & Words" reflecting on the mission and these beautiful images! The film is in beautiful 4K with a run time of 23 minutes - you can watch on your computer or plug the USB into a 4K TV for best quality viewing This film was the first of our "Apollo Reflections" Series - Here's what people have said about these wonderful films and images: "Can't thank you enough for the 'flash drive' with all the Apollo 13 photos. A lot of my life has been dedicated to the Space Program and I appreciate your interest in assuring that material that might be lost over the years is being preserved through your effort." Fred Haise, Apollo 13 LMP"They are without a doubt the highest quality image archive I have seen, and you need to be congratulated on the work and effort you have gone to!" Max A."THANK YOU so much for the Apollo 9 flight image collection! These images are by far the BEST resolution I have ever seen from Apollo 9! and the entire catalog taboot! Again, I can't say thank you enough." Matt P."Amazing quality images. I hope more people see the work you are doing it is truly amazing! It's a gold mine for those who know it!" Apollospace customer"Great productions. I like your down to earth more informal interview style. Keep up the good work. NASA has lots of oral history but it is not as interesting and personalized as what you create. Thanks for your great work preserving some history from those who flew!" Fred Haise, Apollo 13 LMP"Astronaut Rusty Schweickart's story is one of the great ones, and the way this film ["Rusty Schweickart: Apollo 9 & Beyond"] tells the story has its own greatness." Stewart Brand, co-founder of Long Now Foundation and creator and editor of the Whole Earth Catalog (National Book Award)."What was the real meaning of Apollo? The big meaning? That's what I asked myself anticipating the 50th anniversary of that historic moment. Jeremy Theoret captured it in this film - this is what I believe. No small challenge." Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart."I am proud and honored to have been helpful in producing the beautiful piece of art that is this film. From the music to the visuals to what comes out of the mind of an amazing human being, this is a seamless and for me deeply emotional work that is a major contribution to the annals of space and also human history. You have produced something very special with this. What I get from it cannot be measured in any form of currency. I want to savor the incredibly warm feeling this film has given me, thank you for that gift." Martin Lollar, crowdfunding executive producer of "Rusty Schweickart: Apollo 9 & Beyond""I have just reviewed the film you produced and it looks perfect to me. I think you did an outstanding job of capturing the important points that you wanted to bring out concerning the Gemini and Apollo programs." Gen. Tom Stafford, Gemini 6, 9, Apollo 10, & ASTP astronaut "What a wonderful and amazing film. Fred Haise provides such a terrific narrative. The clarity of the filming of Fred's historical and anecdotal recounting as well as the crystal-clear photographs is remarkable. It gives me great pride to have my name associated with this film and thank you for the exquisite and professional product." Arthur Siemientkowski, producer of "Apollo 13 in Pictures and Words." The Flight Images: At 5000 pixels, the Apollo 7 flight images on this USB are up to 65% larger than partially restored and corrected counterparts available online and on other commercially available media, which generally measure only up to 3000 pixels each, are only a few megabytes in size (if that), and have not been fully corrected and cleaned.Each and every image on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB has been painstakingly cropped and corrected for color, tone, and contrast and cleaned of all blemishes including dust, hairs, scan lines, emulsion spots, streaks, scratches, stray reflections, and other flaws. It is common for images to require as many as several hundred separate corrective actions to achieve the restored, corrected, and enhanced versions available on this USB. It is impossible to overstate the quality and beauty of these photographs - the most pristine they've appeared since they were originally taken 50 years ago. The original negatives from the Apollo missions are stored in frozen vaults at Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, TX. Master inter-negatives were produced from the originals in order to preserve the originals while being to reproduce photographs, meaning successive generations of photographs were often produced from 2nd, 3rd, or later generations of negatives. JSC digitally scanned the Apollo Program photographs for the 40th anniversary of Apollo in and around 2005 and later. These raw images can be seen on the National Archives website and various NASA image galleries online. More recently, JSC has been re-scanning the original negatives at the highest resolutions ever in preparation for the 50th anniversary of Apollo, pursuant to a Space Act Agreement between Arizona State University (ASU) and NASA?s Johnson Space Center. The raw images used in creating the images found on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB were acquired from ASU. Unfortunately, until today, the majority of these scanned images have not been available anywhere as completely restored, corrected, and enhanced high resolution images. What there is, are collections of images in raw, unprocessed form, or partially or marginally processed images that fail to fully showcase these images as they truly deserve to be seen. This USB is changing that. More than an historical record of one of the greatest accomplishments in human history, these images are also art. Each photograph appearing on this USB was taken by a human hand and with a human eye. 50 years later, each one been restored, corrected, and enhanced with a human eye as well, to be as visually pleasing as they are historically and naturally accurate. Just compare the raw and partially corrected images from the Apollo 7 Mission currently available online and on other commercially available media with the fully restored versions available on this commemorative USB: Raw image NASA ID#AS07-03-1531: Raw image NASA ID# AS07-03-1531 available through Project Apollo Archive on Flickr photo credit: NASA/JSC Partially restored image NASA ID#AS07-03-1531 available online (with representative blemishes circled): Partially restored image NASA ID# AS07-03-1531 available from the Project Apollo Archive website photo credit: NASA/JSC Closeup samples of a few stray hairs and blemishes from the above image: And the fully restored, corrected, and enhanced version of NASA ID#AS07-03-1531 available on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB: NASA ID# AS07-03-1531 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace The same images below are at a scale of 10% to illustrate the much larger image sizes of the images on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB: Partially restored image NASA ID# AS07-03-1531 available from the Project Apollo Archive website photo credit: NASA/JSC measures approx. 3000 x 3000 pixels and 2 MB in size Fully restored image NASA ID# AS07-03-1531 available on the Apollo 7 Flight Images USB photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace measuring 5000 x 5000 pixels and 15 MB in size Raw image NASA ID# AS07-07-1877: Raw image NASA ID# AS07-07-1877 available from the Project Apollo Archive on Flickr photo credit: NASA/JSC The fully restored version available on the USB: NASA ID# AS07-07-1877 fully restored on the Apollo 7 Flight Images USB photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace Another raw image (NASA ID# AS07-07-1874) ... Raw image of NASA ID# AS07-07-1874 available from the Project Apollo Archive on Flickr photo credit: NASA/JSC ... and the fully restored version on the USB: NASA ID# AS07-07-1874 fully restored on the Apollo 7 Flight Images USB photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace Here is the fully restored version of NASA ID# AS07-08-1933 available on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB: NASA ID# AS07-08-1933 fully restored available on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace measuring 5000 x 5000 pixels and 17 MB in size This is the upper right corner of the version available elsewhere online - with numerous spots and streaks visible: Section of image NASA ID# AS07-08-1933 available from the Project Apollo Archive website This is the same corner section fully corrected of blemishes as available on the USB: Raw image NASA ID# AS07-11-1992: Raw image NASA ID# AS07-11-1992 available from the Project Apollo Archive on Flickr photo credit: NASA/JSC The way the image should look fully restored (and as it appears on the USB): NASA ID# AS07-11-1992 available from the Apollo 7 Flight Images USB photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace measuring 5000 x 5000 pixels and 26 MB in sizeThere are simply too many incredibly gorgeous images to show here, but here are just a few more of our favorites: NASA ID # AS07-04-1586 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace NASA ID# AS07-04-1582 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace NASA ID # AS07-04-1583 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace NASA ID# AS07-04-1570 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace NASA ID# AS07-03-1545 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/ApollospaceNASA ID# AS07-03-1523 photo credit: NASA/JSC/ASU/ApollospacePhoto credits for the images appearing on The Apollo 7 Flight Images USB: NASA/JSC/ASU/Apollospace. Photo credits for other images: NASA/JSC. Note that due to the nature of this product, we cannot accept returns and issue refunds. If a USB is defective, we will replace it upon return of the defective item. Thank you.
Price: 12.99 USD
Location: Albuquerque, New Mexico
End Time: 2024-03-01T19:44:23.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Exploration Missions: Apollo
Type: Photograph Archive
Year: 2018
Theme: Astronauts & Space Travel
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States