Vintage 1978 foldout technical illustration of Space Shuttle Columbia (OV-102), from the collection of Donald E. "Doc" Stullken.
Stullken was NASA's Chief of Recovery Operations Branch. From Mercury through Skylab, he was often the first person the astronauts would see as they stepped onto the ship from the recovery helicopter. He also invented the Mercury Auxiliary Flotation Collar usually referred to as "The Stullken Collar." During Shuttle, Stullken served as Chief of the Training Integration Branch.
Much of Stullken's private NASA archive was offered at auction following his death. This technical illustration comes from his personal copy of the "Orbiter Crash and Rescue" technical manual (see photos).
A striking and affordable vintage Shuttle illustration from the personal archive of a significant NASA figure. Will look amazing framed!
Condition: Very Good. Light crease marks along vertical fold near top edge—can easily be minimized when matted and framed. Moderate foxing to right panel with light speckling throughout. Colors may vary slightly. Paper is very lightly age-toned, not the stark white shown in the scan.
Size: Trifold (~11" x 14.75"), two vertical accordion folds.
Shipped in a rigid PVC toploader to prevent damage in transit. Shipping and handling calculated at checkout based on your location.
100% guaranteed to be authentic and as described. Comes with an Orbital Artifacts COA.
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SKU: STUL-071
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