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PANORAMASPanorama of railyard and depot, captioned 'Picture of Ironville Shops', in pencil on verso, cyanotype, 195 x 1095mm., [c.1920]--CLEMENS (R.S.) 'No Man's Land. Sight of Explosion... W.S. Naval Ammunitions Depot, Lake Denmark, N.J., July 10 1926', 238 x 990mm., Lakehurst, N.J., [1926]--'Allentown Looking West from New Gas Tank, 2nd Union St., 1928', short tear in sky area, some spotting, 240 x 1195mm., Penn State Photo Studio, 1928; [NAVY MARINE CORPS RELIEF SOCIETY BUILDINGS, CHICAGO] 'For Navy Relief Society', very long panorama, captioned 'For Navy Relief Society... copyright Maryhart, Chicago' in the negative, 185 x 2580mm., Chicago, [1950s]--'Ketchikan, Alaska, 1916', 150 x 830mm., [1916, printed later]--SHEELOR (F.W.) 'Reindeer Herd, Nome Alaska', 235 x 1350mm., [Alaska, c.1915]--GOLDECK (E.O.) 'Mt. Mckinley and the Alaska Range -Mt. Mckinley National Park - Alaska', framed and glazed, image 225 x 1160mm., San Antonio, Texas, [1950s]; and a quantity of other photographic views of America, including 10 large rolled panoramas, and a collection of approximately 50 early twentieth century small panoramic views taken with a Kodak Panoram camera, or similar (quantity)For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A William III sixpence (1697); a Queen Anne shilling (1703); a George III shilling (1816); Victorian and later florins, sixpences and threepences; royal commemorative medallions; USA coins; a stamp album; Kodak No.2 Hawkette; Korak Hawkeye camera; other royal memorabilia; and silver-plated spoons; in a vintage leather suitcase.
Two views of the Apollo 8 crew, William Anders, James Lovell and Frank Borman, during the water egress training before the first voyage to the Moon Apollo 8, October 1968 Two vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based paper, 20.5 x 25.3 cm (8 x 10 in), RED NUMBERED NASA S-68-53220 and S-68-53223, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks and NASA Manned Spacecraft Center captions on the verso
Expended Saturn IVB rocket stage in Earth orbit Apollo 7, 11 October 1968 Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based paper, 20.5 x 25.3 cm (8 x 10 in), [NASA photo no AS7-3-1545], with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso (NASA/North American Rockwell) Footnotes: The photograph was taken as the crew practiced rendezvous techniques that would be needed for the later lunar flights. The S-IVB stage was used as a second stage for Saturn IB launches and as the third stage for Saturn V launches. On Saturn V flights the four Spacecraft/LM Adapter panels would be jettisoned to allow access to the Lunar Module. Cape Canaveral and Merritt Island, Florida, can be seen beyond the left side of the lower end of the S-IVB. Condition Report: Mint Condition Report Disclaimer
Thomas Stafford, Eugene Cernan or John Young A pair of orbital studies of lunar terrain: Keeler U and Ventris craters Apollo 10, 18-26 May 1969 Two vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), [NASA AS10-34-5172 and AS10-34-5173], with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on verso, (NASA/North American Rockwell) Condition Report: Mint Condition Report Disclaimer
Eugene Cernan, John Young or Thomas Stafford The Moon seen from the departing Apollo 10 spacecraft after the trans-earth injection Apollo 10, 18-26 May 1969 Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based paper, 20.5 x 25.4 cm (10 x 8 in), [NASA AS10-27-3948], with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso, (NASA/North American Rockwell) Footnotes: A view of the Moon recorded after trans-Earth injection as the spacecraft was on its free return trajectory. According to the 2002 Guinness Book of World Records, Apollo 10 set the record for the highest speed attained by a manned vehicle: 39,897 km/h (11.08 km/s or 24,791 mph) on May 26, 1969, during the return from the Moon Condition Report: Mint Condition Report Disclaimer
Michael Collins Diptych: rugged lunar terrain near Crater Daedalus; two consecutive views taken from the orbit Apollo 11, 20 July 1969 Two vintage chromogenic prints on resin-coated paper, 25.3 x 20.5 (10 x 8 in), [unreleased views NASA AS11-44-6612 and AS11-44-6612], with THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK watermarks on the verso (mid-1970s prints)
Charles Duke, John Young or Ken Mattingly Four orbital views of lunar craters: Morozov, Saenger, King Craters Apollo 16, 17-27 April 1972 Four vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based Kodak paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA AS16-120-19216, AS16-120-19225, AS16-120-19227 and AS16-120-19271, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso Footnotes: 'The thing that impressed me about the Moon is how different regions are so different. Now they all look the same to the geophysicist. But they sure look different to the people that are orbiting close in. Every little crater's got a different characteristic. And it's sure hard to pick out till you get down there and really look at 'em.' - John Young (Chaikin, Voices, p. 42)
Harrison Schmitt, Eugene Cernan or Ronald Evans Orbital view of the lunar surface before landing Apollo 17, 7-19 Dec 1972 Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based Kodak paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA AS17-151-21378, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso Footnotes: Lunar horizon looking north east over the floor of Crater Mendeleev during the third revolution of the spacecraft around the Moon. Condition Report: Mint Condition Report Disclaimer
Harrison Schmitt Ronald Evans during the trans-earth EVA - the last EVA of the Apollo programme Apollo 17, 7-19 December 1972 Vintage chromogenic print on resin-coated Kodak paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), [NASA AS17-152-23391], with THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK watermark on the verso (NASA/North American Rockwell) Footnotes: Evans' task was to recover film cassettes and conduct an inspection of the spacecraft. The spacewalk took over an hour while the spacecraft was approximately 180,000 miles from Earth. Evans holds the record for the longest time spent in lunar orbit - six days, three hours and 48 minutes.
Saturn third stage jettison; a view from the Command Module after the translunar injection Apollo 14, 31 January - 9 February 1971 Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA AS14-72-9936, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on verso Footnote: After the successful docking manoeuvre and extraction of the LM, the empty SIVB third stage was targeted for a crash landing on the Moon
Very rare "Gold camera" close up of lunar surface, a stereo view showing lumps of lunar rocks and powder, with another laboratory view of the rocks brought back from the Moon Apollo 11, 16-24 Jul 1969 One vintage chromogenic print on resin-coated paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), BLACK NUMBERED NASA AS11-45-6706, with THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK watermarks on verso, with one a vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper, BLACK NUMBERED NASA S-69-45002 Footnotes: While on the lunar surface, the Apollo 11 astronauts used two cameras: the 70mm 500EL Hasselblad data camera and the Gold 35mm stereo camera to take close ups of the lunar surface
The lift off of the Titan rocket carrying Gus Grissom and John Young on the first manned Gemini flight 23 March 1965 Vintage chromogenic print, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (8 x 10 in), RED NUMBERED NASA S-65-20742, with A KODAK PAPER watermark and NASA Manned Spacecraft Centre caption on verso Condition Report: A tear in the left margin, paper loss to the verso Condition Report Disclaimer
Eugene Cernan or Thomas Stafford Three photographs of the Earth from space, comprising views of Peru, Chile, Bolivia including Lake Titicaca (NASA S-66-38312), Peru: coastal areas, Andes, Cordillera Blanca, Huascaran including the 10 January 1962 avalanche path (NASA S-66-38298) and Canary Islands and Moroccan coast (NASA S-66-38405) Gemini 9A, 3-6 June 1966 Three vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based paper, 25.3 x 20.3 (10 x 8 in), all RED NUMBERED in upper margins, with A KODAK PAPER watermarked on the verso, photo no S-66-38298 bears a NASA Manned Spacecraft Center caption on the verso
Thomas Stafford A view of Gemini 7 from Gemini 6A spacecraft during the first ever rendezvous of two spacecraft in space, taken from a distance of approximately 29 feet Gemini 6A/7, 15 December 1965 Vintage chromogenic print on fibre-based paper, 25.3 x 20.5 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA S-65-63220, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks and NASA Manned Spacecraft Center captions on verso Illustrated: Ron Schick, Julia van Hafen, The View from Space, p. 51
Thomas Stafford Two views of Gemini 7 spacecraft photographed from Gemini 6A, as they travelled at 17,000 mph Gemini 6A/7, 15 December 1965 Two vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based paper, one RED NUMBERED NASA S-65-63194 [the other numbered in hand NASA S-65-63168] , with A KODAK PAPER watermarks

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21587 item(s)/page