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T O P I C R E V I E WRobert PearlmanISS Expedition 40 mission patchThe International Space Station's (ISS) Expedition 40 begins with the scheduled undocking of Soyuz TMA-11M in May 2014. Three new crew members will arrive shortly thereafter on Soyuz TMA-13M.Credit: NASAISS Expedition 40 will be commanded by NASA astronaut Steven Swanson. His crewmates, all flight engineers, include: Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov, Oleg Artemyev and Maxim Suraev, NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Alexander Gerst.The Expedition 40 patch depicts the past, present, and future of human space exploration. The crew wrote the description, as follows: The reliable and proven Soyuz, our ride to the International Space Station (ISS), is a part of the past, present, and future. The ISS is the culmination of an enormous effort by many countries partnering to produce a first-class orbiting laboratory, and its image represents the current state of space exploration. The ISS is immensely significant to us as our home away from home and our oasis in the sky. The commercial cargo vehicle is also part of the current human space exploration and is a link to the future. A blend of legacy and future technologies is being used to create the next spacecrafts which will carry humans from our planet to destinations beyond. The sun on Earth’s horizon represents the new achievements and technologies that will come about due to our continued effort in space exploration.J BlackburnBeautiful artwork, who designed the patch?dogcrew5369So that is a Dragon supply ship heading to the ISS? Awesome. Looking forward to one day having the Falcon rocket represented on a crew patch. Nice patch. QuiGon Grin quote:Originally posted by J Blackburn:Beautiful artwork, who designed the patch?My sentiments exactly. This layout is defiantly different from previous patches and as such a particular artist doesn't jump to mind.East-FrisianI like this patch too, much more better than 41 and 42.Robert PearlmanCourtesy AB Emblem, here is an early look at the embroidered Expedition 40 patch, as approved by NASA. AB Emblem does not plan to offer this patch for sale until closer to the launch in 2014. Until then, this patch will not be in production except for the orders directly from NASA. BMckayThey did a great job. Well worth the wait. It is cool to have a full Soyuz and ISS on the same patch.Robert PearlmancollectSPACE Astronaut's cloaked Klingon space patch: Star Trek-inspired emblem revealedIn a mirror universe right now, an alternate Steve Swanson is wearing a space patch bearing the logo of the fictional Klingon Empire.In this reality, NASA jettisoned the astronaut's "Star Trek" inspired emblem before it could reach space.Swanson, who currently is commander of the International Space Station, collaborated with his daughter to create an insignia for the outpost's Expedition 40 crew. What he and his fellow astronauts and cosmonauts ultimately launched with to the space station was a patch depicting the "past, present, and future of human space exploration."What Swanson had first proposed however, was a badge of a decidedly different type... KSCartistNASA lawyers need to lighten up. I can almost guarantee that if NASA had asked the owners of the Star Trek rights, they would have been thrilled to have their "brand" in space for real.Hart SastrowardoyoThere was a story, most likely an urban legend that the owners of Star Trek - whether it was Paramount, Viacom, CBS or whoever - had copyrighted "USS Enteprise" and asked the Navy for money. At which point the Navy laughed and basically said, "We had it first."Robert PearlmanBoing Boing shared the article, which resulted in this on Twitter: @BoingBoing: A Klingon is currently commander of the International Space Station.@WilliamShatner: Who does the vetting process on these guys?@XeniJardin: BAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH@WilliamShatner: When he brings the bird of prey out from the back of the moon and decloaks who'll be laughing then?Hart SastrowardoyoI wouldn't worry about it. We'll need the Bird of Prey when the Whalesong Probe comes a-callin'. Either that, or we're all going to be exiled to Ceti Alpha V when the Xindi attacks.James913Déjà vu. Glad to see someone is still trying to keep the Empire's banner flying in space. Back during ISS assembly, we had no problem getting permission and encouragement from Star Trek (then Rick Berman's office) to use the Klingon language on our patch for the WORF. And the WORF Klingon lettering was later picked up by NASA for inclusion on the STS-131/19A payload patch. If Steve wants to see some Klingon letters on the ISS, just drift over to the U.S. Lab science window rack...Hart SastrowardoyoMy feeling is that the difference (and the rub) may be that the emblem which the Expedition 40 patch was to be based off is a fan-made design, not one designed by Paramount or people working for Paramount. The problem with my theory is that the Klingon language from the USS Enterprise Officer's Manual (which is where the letters for WORF came from) was also a fan-made item, although the authors later wound up working for Star Trek.Robert PearlmanSteve Swanson visited the Cosmosphere earlier this year and recorded this video about his original Star Trek-inspired version of the Expedition 40 patch (as first reported by collectSPACE back in 2014, linked above).In the video, he also shows off one of the patches he had made of his NASA-rejected design:
ISS Expedition 40 mission patchThe International Space Station's (ISS) Expedition 40 begins with the scheduled undocking of Soyuz TMA-11M in May 2014. Three new crew members will arrive shortly thereafter on Soyuz TMA-13M.Credit: NASAISS Expedition 40 will be commanded by NASA astronaut Steven Swanson. His crewmates, all flight engineers, include: Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov, Oleg Artemyev and Maxim Suraev, NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Alexander Gerst.The Expedition 40 patch depicts the past, present, and future of human space exploration. The crew wrote the description, as follows: The reliable and proven Soyuz, our ride to the International Space Station (ISS), is a part of the past, present, and future. The ISS is the culmination of an enormous effort by many countries partnering to produce a first-class orbiting laboratory, and its image represents the current state of space exploration. The ISS is immensely significant to us as our home away from home and our oasis in the sky. The commercial cargo vehicle is also part of the current human space exploration and is a link to the future. A blend of legacy and future technologies is being used to create the next spacecrafts which will carry humans from our planet to destinations beyond. The sun on Earth’s horizon represents the new achievements and technologies that will come about due to our continued effort in space exploration.
The International Space Station's (ISS) Expedition 40 begins with the scheduled undocking of Soyuz TMA-11M in May 2014. Three new crew members will arrive shortly thereafter on Soyuz TMA-13M.
ISS Expedition 40 will be commanded by NASA astronaut Steven Swanson. His crewmates, all flight engineers, include: Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexander Skvortsov, Oleg Artemyev and Maxim Suraev, NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman and European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Alexander Gerst.
The Expedition 40 patch depicts the past, present, and future of human space exploration. The crew wrote the description, as follows:
The reliable and proven Soyuz, our ride to the International Space Station (ISS), is a part of the past, present, and future. The ISS is the culmination of an enormous effort by many countries partnering to produce a first-class orbiting laboratory, and its image represents the current state of space exploration.
The ISS is immensely significant to us as our home away from home and our oasis in the sky. The commercial cargo vehicle is also part of the current human space exploration and is a link to the future.
A blend of legacy and future technologies is being used to create the next spacecrafts which will carry humans from our planet to destinations beyond. The sun on Earth’s horizon represents the new achievements and technologies that will come about due to our continued effort in space exploration.
quote:Originally posted by J Blackburn:Beautiful artwork, who designed the patch?
My sentiments exactly. This layout is defiantly different from previous patches and as such a particular artist doesn't jump to mind.
AB Emblem does not plan to offer this patch for sale until closer to the launch in 2014. Until then, this patch will not be in production except for the orders directly from NASA.
Astronaut's cloaked Klingon space patch: Star Trek-inspired emblem revealedIn a mirror universe right now, an alternate Steve Swanson is wearing a space patch bearing the logo of the fictional Klingon Empire.In this reality, NASA jettisoned the astronaut's "Star Trek" inspired emblem before it could reach space.Swanson, who currently is commander of the International Space Station, collaborated with his daughter to create an insignia for the outpost's Expedition 40 crew. What he and his fellow astronauts and cosmonauts ultimately launched with to the space station was a patch depicting the "past, present, and future of human space exploration."What Swanson had first proposed however, was a badge of a decidedly different type...
In a mirror universe right now, an alternate Steve Swanson is wearing a space patch bearing the logo of the fictional Klingon Empire.
In this reality, NASA jettisoned the astronaut's "Star Trek" inspired emblem before it could reach space.
Swanson, who currently is commander of the International Space Station, collaborated with his daughter to create an insignia for the outpost's Expedition 40 crew. What he and his fellow astronauts and cosmonauts ultimately launched with to the space station was a patch depicting the "past, present, and future of human space exploration."
What Swanson had first proposed however, was a badge of a decidedly different type...
@BoingBoing: A Klingon is currently commander of the International Space Station.@WilliamShatner: Who does the vetting process on these guys?@XeniJardin: BAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH@WilliamShatner: When he brings the bird of prey out from the back of the moon and decloaks who'll be laughing then?
@WilliamShatner: Who does the vetting process on these guys?
@XeniJardin: BAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
@WilliamShatner: When he brings the bird of prey out from the back of the moon and decloaks who'll be laughing then?
Back during ISS assembly, we had no problem getting permission and encouragement from Star Trek (then Rick Berman's office) to use the Klingon language on our patch for the WORF. And the WORF Klingon lettering was later picked up by NASA for inclusion on the STS-131/19A payload patch.
If Steve wants to see some Klingon letters on the ISS, just drift over to the U.S. Lab science window rack...
The problem with my theory is that the Klingon language from the USS Enterprise Officer's Manual (which is where the letters for WORF came from) was also a fan-made item, although the authors later wound up working for Star Trek.
In the video, he also shows off one of the patches he had made of his NASA-rejected design:
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