NASA, 4. Venus

NASA, 4. Venus

Price from € 31.80

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Format: A4, A3, 50 x 70 cm. and 70 x 100 cm.

 

Super nice and feminine NASA poster with a motif of Venus.

Size:
A3 (29,7x42 cm)
50 x 70 cm.
70 x 100 cm.
Choose size
pcs.
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  • We mount poster and frame

PRINTED WITH ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENSS
At Permild & Rosengreen we do everything we can, to take care of the environment.
This poster is produced with 230 grams matt FSC-certified paper, that assures responsibly managed forests. It assures that there will be cut down no more trees than the forest can reproduce. FSC is also a safety of protection for the life of animals and plants in the nature, and proper working conditions for the workers of the forest.


"Venus / # 4" is probably the most feminine and delicate among the NASA posters. The design is designed by Jessie Kawata and the beautiful, curved font is designed by Lois Kim. They both work for Jet Propulsion Laboratory at NASA as "visual strategists" - or with a less fancy word: Designers. The script, the soft lines in the clouds and the absence of black lines are a decorative art nouveau style loan that had its heyday around 1900. Venus was not the easiest planet for NASA to make a delicious poster for. First, they tried to start from the planet's surface. But Venus is not a particularly nice planet. The atmosphere consists mostly of carbon dioxide, ie CO2, so the greenhouse effect on Venus is extreme. This means that Venus is outrageously warm at the surface (about 450-500 C °). To this end, the clouds, which are close to the entire Venus surface, consist of sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acid. The fact that the planet is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty is thus nothing less than misleading - at least it is difficult to imagine a less loving planet. Nevertheless, they have succeeded in creating a delicate and luxurious looking poster. Despite Venus' skyer's toxic nature, they look incredibly beautiful at a distance. The solution therefore became a poster depicting a platform out in Venus' clouds, from which one has an exquisite view of Mercury's journey past the sun. On the poster, Merkur's orbit is illustrated by 11 dots - 10 gray and 1 black - across the sun.