Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

NASA celebrates Earth’s incredible natural beauty with free photo book

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you ever need reminding just how incredible and unique Earth really is, then bury yourself in this wonderful treat from NASA that shows our planet in all its natural glory.

Recommended Videos

The book, appropriately titled Earth, features stunning imagery captured over the years by various NASA satellites. There’s a hardcover version for $53 ($74.20 if you’re outside the U.S.) that will blow away anything else you have lying on your coffee table, but for the princely sum of nothing you can also download a pdf, epub, or mobi version for ebook readers and tablets.

For quick and easy access, however, head to the online version that offers the same content as the book but with interactive elements. Here, you’ll find the imagery among four categories: atmosphere, water, land, and ice and snow.

Click on the atmosphere category, for example, and marvel at the beautiful “curving cloud streets” in the skies above South America, and be sure to check out the dramatic “double trouble” shot that captured two hurricanes heading toward Hawaii in 2016.

Each image comes with a short description explaining its content, and there’s also an option to click through to the “full story” for a more in-depth account. It’s here that you’ll also find links to high-res downloads that can be enlarged for even greater detail.

“For all of the dynamism and detail we can observe from orbit, sometimes it is worth stepping back and simply admiring Earth,” Michael Carlowicz of the Earth Observatory writes in the book’s foreword.

“NASA has a unique vantage point for observing the beauty and wonder of Earth and for making sense of it. Looking back from space, astronaut Edgar Mitchell once called Earth ‘a sparkling blue and white jewel,’ and it does dazzle the eye. The planet’s palette of colors and textures and shapes — far more than just blues and whites — are spread across the pages of this book.”

Inspirational quality

Carlowicz says the creators of the book chose its 69 images for their inspirational quality.

“They tell a story of land, wind, water, ice, and air as they can only be viewed from above,” he writes, adding, “They show us that no matter what the human mind can imagine, no matter what the artist can conceive, there are few things more fantastic and inspiring than the world as it already is.”

For more amazing satellite imagery, check out this gallery featuring photos taken by NASA’s now-retired Earth Observing-1 satellite, several of which made it into NASA’s Earth book.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
I bought Kodak’s viral keychain camera, and the bad photos are part of its charm
The Kodak Charmera is barely a camera, and I still keep using it
Machine, Wheel, Camera

I bought the Kodak Charmera partly because I wanted a portable digital camera, and partly because I wanted a pretty little collectible. The Charmera is sold as a blind box, so you do not know which version you are getting until the box is opened. There are multiple retro Kodak-style designs, plus a transparent secret edition that looks like the one everyone would want.

I had the shopkeeper pick my box for better luck, and it worked out. I got the yellow variant, which is inspired by Kodak's original 80s disposable camera. The transparent one is definitely the fun collector’s piece, but the yellow model feels like the proper Kodak version. It looks like a tiny toy camera that escaped from a souvenir shop, found a keyring, and now hangs around wherever you go.

Read more
This new $30 keychain camera is coming for Kodak Charmera with a flip screen for selfies
Yashica's new camera makes toy photography more fun
YASHICA Funtastic Keychain Camera in multiple variants

Tiny digital cameras are all the rage, and Yashica is now offering a very cute toy photography experience of its own. The company’s new Funtastic Keychain Camera is exactly what the name suggests, a miniature digital camera small enough to clip onto your keys, bag, or lanyard. The popular Kodak Charmera is the obvious comparison, which brings a tiny blind-box keychain camera that became a viral collectible.

Now, Yashica's version lands in the same novelty-camera lane, but adds one very useful trick, which is a 180-degree flip screen.

Read more
Google releases big v4.0 update for its popular Snapseed editing app on Android
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

After years of sitting on its hands, Google appears to have remembered it owns one of the best photo editing apps on mobile. Snapseed 4.0 is now rolling out to Android, bringing the platform up to speed after a stretch of iOS exclusivity that left Android users watching from the sidelines.

The story starts last June, when Google quietly broke Snapseed out of its long dormancy with a significant 3.0 update for iPhone. It was a surprise move that suggested the company was serious about the app again. Google then confirmed at the start of this year that Android wouldn't be left behind for long, and true to that word, the Play Store listing has now been updated to reflect version 4.0 — skipping straight past 3.0 for Android users and landing both platforms on the same version simultaneously.

Read more