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Utterly Stunning Video: View from the ISS at Night, by Knate Myers

By Keith Cowing
NASA Watch
July 22, 2012
Filed under ,

“Every frame in this video is a photograph taken from the International Space Station. All credit goes to the crews on board the ISS. I removed noise and edited some shots in photoshop. Compiled and arranged in Sony Vegas. Music by John Murphy – Sunshine (Adagio In D Minor).” More.
Keith’s note: If you want to download a copy of this utterly stunning piece of video artistry try this link. Why NASA.gov does not feature things like this is simply baffling. They launched artists to the space station. Who knew?

NASA Watch founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.

9 responses to “Utterly Stunning Video: View from the ISS at Night, by Knate Myers”

  1. jgreason says:
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    The universe we live in is dangerous, challenging, and awsomely beautiful.  Some see the size of it and, daunted, want to huddle closer around our solitary campfire.  Some of us are inspired to go and see what is out there, and perhaps, in time, start new fires of our own.

  2. Jim Olson says:
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    Very excellent. 

  3. Antonio Mario says:
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    Fantastic! Kudos to the astronauts and their incredibly well planned images/sequences and a job well done by the photographer.

    I just felt the astronauts’s names should be in the credits, at the end of the movie.

  4. Greg says:
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    2mins 50 seconds – wow!

  5. David A. Hardy says:
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    WHAT artists?  They didn’t ask me! 🙁

  6. thebigMoose says:
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    The awesomeness of the fragment of the universe shown in these images will resonate within me forever! 

  7. Ralph says:
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    The images and music are sheer poetry.  Very well done.

  8. Mike Fair says:
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    I read once, perhaps in Gene Cernan’s book, that many of the moonwalkers, who were pilots above all, changed their minds about the nature of space exploration after they got to the moon.  They felt that artists should’ve been sent.

  9. no one of consequence says:
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    Reminded me of the imagery of Soderbergh’s Solaris movie.