ESA Posters
26 February 2026
Did you know a selection of ESA's most iconic and eye-catching space posters are available in an A3 print-ready format?
Click on the "Access this image" button to download these awesome posters! Check all the most recent ones out here!
JWST
The artist, Davide Bonazzi, captured the magic of Webb, showing Webb as the eye that lets us see how stars, planets and the first galaxies were created!
Ariane
The first Ariane rocket lifted off at the end of 1979. This poster is one of an awesome collection, celebrating Ariane's 40th birthday! From Ariane 1 to Ariane 6, these six generations of the family have launched hundreds of times, with more to come!
Space Rider
Space rider is Europe's first reusable spaceplane! At about the size of two minivans it will stay in orbit for around two months, carrying our experiments with its robotic laboratory.
International Space Station
Ale Giorgini created this awesome poster to celebrate the ISS' 20th birthday!
Since Crew One first started living on the station, hundreds of people and tens of ESA astronauts have lived and worked in orbit around Earth. They carry out great research which helps space exploration and also life on Earth.
RISE
ESA wants to keep space clean and safe.
With the RISE mission, ESA will be able to meet up with different satellites that need help and then keep these satellites working for longer while moving them out of harm's way.
Vigil
Have you ever wondered what the weather is like in space?
The Sun can throw particles, super hot gas and harmful light towards us. This can stop satellites from working, meaning that you might not be able to talk to people by phone, you may lose your GPS navigation, and you may even lose power!
Luckily Vigil will be able to warn us days before these events could happen, like a weather reporter for space!
Space Debris
The space age began in 1957 with the launch of Sputnik 1...
Ever since, junk in orbit has been increasing, as leftover rocket parts, broken satellites, exploding fuel tanks, and space crashes leave lots of parts behind.
ESA’s Space Debris Office is tracking this junk down, finding more than 20 000 pieces and now they help keep other spacecraft stay safe!