Capture the Bat Nebula's spread wings on your wall. This isn't a digital painting — it's NGC 6995, the glowing aftermath of a supernova drifting through the constellation Cygnus, photographed through my own telescope and printed on premium poster paper.
NGC 6995 is part of the Veil Nebula complex, the expanding remains of a massive star that exploded around 8,000 years ago. What you're looking at is real light from real gas, still racing outward across 2,400 light-years of space. The bat-like silhouette comes from how red hydrogen meets veins of teal oxygen — a shape carved by a star's death, held still in the moment the camera caught it.
Real astrophotography. No AI, no stock. Just deep sky on your wall.
Capture the Bat Nebula's spread wings on your wall. This isn't a digital painting — it's NGC 6995, the glowing aftermath of a supernova drifting through the constellation Cygnus, photographed through my own telescope and printed on premium poster paper.
NGC 6995 is part of the Veil Nebula complex, the expanding remains of a massive star that exploded around 8,000 years ago. What you're looking at is real light from real gas, still racing outward across 2,400 light-years of space. The bat-like silhouette comes from how red hydrogen meets veins of teal oxygen — a shape carved by a star's death, held still in the moment the camera caught it.
Real astrophotography. No AI, no stock. Just deep sky on your wall.