‘What Miss Mitchell Saw’ by Hayley Barrett and Diana Sudyka
In this children's book, discover the amazing true story of Maria Mitchell, America's first professional female astronomer.
In this children's book, discover the amazing true story of Maria Mitchell, America's first professional female astronomer.
A better lunar complication, available only on the new watchOS 6.
Spark your little one's curiosity about the night sky from an early age.
Based on an official NASA image, this challenging, superbly detailed 1,000-piece puzzle will take you a good while to solve.
Are you a total space nerd? This NASA-backed watch is made for you.
A stainless steel, PVD coated version of the Mark One, only available through an 8-day Kickstarter campaign.
A surprisingly high quality stargazing tool for its price point, with proceeds going to an excellent cause.
Build and customize a planetary rover and undertake hours of missions inspired by NASA astronauts.
This summer 2018 quarterly limited edition celebrates the space programs from fifty years ago that eventually got us to the Moon.
A limited-edition Squire that seeks out answers to the secrets of the universe.
A great way to open up the wonders of the universe to an aspiring young astronomer.
A custom fountain pen inspired by our cosmic night sky.
An upcoming coffee table book that collects 300 images — including photos, paintings, sculpture, animation, prints, sketches, and digital renderings — celebrating the culture of astronomy.
A magnificent hardcover astrophotography book and video series exploring the ongoing disappearing of our night sky due to light pollution.
Eight 10" melamine plates designed to look like the planets of our solar system.
The phenomenal true story — which inspired the film of the same name — about the black female mathematicians at NASA whose calculations helped fuel some of America’s greatest achievements in space.
Charts the stars of the northern and southern hemispheres and includes diagrams of our earth's axis, phases of the moon, solstices, equinoxes, eclipses, and illustrations of more notable satellites.
A decent entry-level telescope for kids (or anyone else) just discovering the joys of astronomy.