Apollo Space Missions
This section is a small selection and for reference only
Other associated patches will be added as and when available Double click on mission patch to magnify
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Pages within this section: Apollo 1-17
Apollo Mission Patches
Pages within this section:
Apollo 11 - LEM 5 Patch
Apollo 11 - Lunar Module Patch
Officially, the mission patch signifies the final mission of the Apollo program of lunar landings. It shows the crescent Moon and Earth lined up with the brilliant Sun on a star-field backdrop. The three large stars near the names signify the three crew members of Apollo 18. The nine medium-sized stars represent the previous Apollo missions to the Moon (Apollos 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, & 17). The two smaller white stars, near the Earth, signify the two Earth-orbit missions of Apollo (Apollos 7 & 9), while the single small gold star honors the crew of Apollo 1 (Grissom, White, & Chaffee), lost in the launch pad fire of January 27, 1967
Apollo 20 is contraversal, NASA has never officially stated Special Operations to the Moon, however this falls under the 'conspiracy banner', there is evidence out there on the internet, manufactured and convincing videos and documentaries or not, is up for debate.
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Apollo 18 [Cancelled]
Apollo 18b [Cancelled]
Apollo 19 [Cancelled]
Apollo 20 [Cancelled]
Apollo 20 [Special Operations]
Apollo Moon Patch
Apollo 20, cancelled due to 'budget cuts'.
Pending update
To commemorate the brave Americans of the Apollo Program, we have partnered with well know and respected space artists and enthusiasts Tim Gagnon (also known as KSCartist) and Dr. Jorge Cartes of Madrid Spain.
Cancelled or Special Operations?
NASA Mission Operations Team Orbital Flight Test 2 Mission Patch from AB Emblem
NASA Mission Operations Team Orbital Flight Test 2 Mission Patch from AB Emblem
New! It took 7 months to get clearance from Boeing! Vert Limited.
NEW! This is the Boeing Mission Operations Team’s Official OFT-2 Mission Patch. 4.75" x 4"
Liftoff on the United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket with Starliner is targeted for 2:53 p.m. EDT Friday, July 30, from Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
The uncrewed mission will test the end-to-end capabilities of the Starliner spacecraft and Atlas V rocket from launch to docking to a return to Earth in the desert of the western United States. Following a successful completion of the OFT-2 mission, NASA and Boeing are targeting late 2021 for NASA’s Boeing Crew Flight Test (CFT), Starliner’s first flight with astronauts aboard.
This is the first planned docking of Starliner after the December 2019 flight failed to rendezvous with the station due to an anomaly with the spacecraft's mission elapsed time (MET) clock. On 6 April 2020, Boeing announced that they would redo the Orbital Flight Test to prove and meet all of the test objectives. A four-month investigation of the first Orbital Flight Test resulted in Boeing proposing another uncrewed flight test of the spacecraft's systems. NASA accepted the proposal from Boeing to do another uncrewed test flight at no cost to the American taxpayers, at an estimated out-of-pocket cost of US$410 million. The mission is planned to use the hardware, Starliner, and Atlas V, originally planned for use on the crewed flight test.
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Apollo Next Giant Leap Moon and Mars Patch