Cyanotype Blueprints, The Whole catalog (as of September 2023)

Cyanotypes are back!

These are hand made cyanotype blueprints on historically accurate vellum paper. Each is unique, and likely to feature small imperfections.The blue will fade if left in the sun (UV, specifically) for an extended period. If this happens, it can be darkened by placing it somewhere dark with good air flow to re-oxidize the ink. Alternatively, hydrogen peroxide, available from grocery stores, will instantly oxidize the ink and restore it to its full hue. These are pieces of art made The Old Fashioned Way.

You can also find some of these prints - and some not listed here - on my ebay page. There I list some early prints for new items, and some of the better quality prints, since there is some variation from run to run. Feel free to check out:

https://www.ebay.com/usr/dynascott



I also take commissions. I can produce blueprints up to 24 inches by slightly more than 72. If you have a diagram of personal or professional interest, I can make a proper cyanotype blueprint from it. These can be used as artworks to hang on your wall, collectors items to keep and enjoy, or props/set dressing for movies. Some of my earlier cyanotypes were used in "Marvels Agents of Shield" and "Hidden Figures." If you'd like to inquire about getting a blueprint of your own, send me an email.

These prints are individually made in a labor intensive and time consuming process. While I have built up a stock, it may be that the production of new ones might take a few days.

IMPORTANT:

Postage fee for up to a dozen prints: $7 for US addresses. Again, this one rate of postage is good for up to a dozen prints. If you want more than a dozen, or want shipment outside of the US, contact me and I'll work out the proper postage.
US postage: $7.00


Below: cyanotypes formatted to fit in standard 11.75X36 inch panoramic frames. These frames are readily available from the likes of Walart, Hobby Lobby, Michaels and others.


11.75X36 Inch Vellum Blueprints

Cyan 01
SST Evolution Chart
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Cyan 01, SST Evolution Chart: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00

A chart showing how the Boeing SST eveolved from early 1957 concepts to the final 2707-300 in 1969. Shows delta winged and variable geometry configurations.
Cyan 02
Convair MX-774 6000 lb warhead
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Cyan 02, Convair MX-774 6000 lb warhead: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A Convair diagram from 1948 depicting an MX-774 design for a ballistic missile of 1000 miles range with a 6,000 pound warhead. Includes a view of a boost-glide separating warhead. This early concept eventually evolved into the Atlas ICBM.
Cyan 03
Convair MX-774 6000 lb warhead
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Cyan 03, Convair MX-774 3000 lb warhead: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A Convair diagram from 1948 depicting an MX-774 design for a ballistic missile of 1000 miles range with a 3,000 pound warhead. This early concept eventually evolved into the Atlas ICBM.
Cyan 04
X-15A-2

Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Cyan 04, NAA X-15A-2: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A 1963 North American Aviation diagram showing the structural arrangement of the X-15A-2 and how it would fit beneath the wing of the NB-52 carrier aircraft.
Cyan 05
Lockheed AH-56
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Cyan 05, AH-56: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Lockheed inboard profile/plan view diagram of the AH-56 Cheyenne, an advanced high speed attack helicopter from the late 1960s. It was equipped with a pusher propeller and a very complex and advanced gunner station.
Cyan 06
B-2A Structure
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
B-2A Structure: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A Northrop diagram presenting two isometric views of the B-2 "Spirit" Stealth Bomber internal structure.
Cyan 07
B-70 Fuselage Structure
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
B-70 Fuselage Structure: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A 1965 North American Aviation diagram of the fuselage structure of the B-70 Mach 3 bomber.
Cyan 08
Convair Mach 3 SST
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Convair Mach 3 SST: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Two diagrams (top/side view, exploded view) of Convair's 1961 concept for a Mach 3 commercial supersonic transport. Convair studied this design to compete against the likes of Lockheed and Boeing for the FAA's SST contract, but decided that the technology was not yet ready.
Cyan 09
Manned Orbital Telescope
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Manned Orbital Telescope: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A mid 1960's Boeing concept for a Manned Orbital Telescope... something like a primitive Hubble space telescope attached to a small Manned Orbital Research laboratory-derived habitat. It would not be permannently manned but man-tended... astronauts would be needed to swap out the film reels and return them to Earth via capsules.
Cyan 10
Aerojet Sea Dragon launch vehicle
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Sea Dragon: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A 1/288 scale diagram of the Aerojet Sea Dragon, a 1963 concept for an immense fully-reusable booster rocket. Built to shipyard standards out of conventional aluminum and steel alloys, it would be pressure fed and simple... but gigantic, with a million pounds of payload.
Cyan 11
Golden Gate Bridge
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Golden Gate Bridge: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Processed from an original vintage blueprint, this is a 1931 "General Plan and Elevation of Bridge" of the Golden Gate Bridge at San Francisco, California.
Cyan 12
Lunar Module Equipment Locations
Closeup 1

Closeup 2

Closeup 3

Closeup 4
Lunar Module Equipment Locations: $55.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Here are two 1969 NASA blueprint sheets showing the internal and external arrangement of the Apollo Lunar Module along with the locations of all major pieces of equipment. I will also release this as a single 24X36 sheet.
Cyan 13
Voyager space probe
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Voyager space probe: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A 1977 Jet Propulsion Laboratory diagram of the "Mariner Jupiter Saturn '77 Spacecraft Mechanical Configuration 6." Quite a detailed diagram; also useful for planning for encounters with V'Ger.
Cyan 14
Lockheed M21/D21
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Lockheed M21/D21: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Lockheed Skunk Works general arrangement diagram of the M-21 "mothership" (a modified 2-seat version of their A-12 spy plane) carryign a D-21 ramjet-powered recon drone.
Cyan 15
Lockheed A-12
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Lockheed A-12: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
An inboard profile/plan of the Lockheed Skunk Works A-12 single-seat spy plane, predecessor to the SR-71. With a few sections.
Cyan 16
Rockwell XFV-12A
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Rockwell XFV-12A: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
The Rockwell XFV-12 was a failed attempt at a shipboard VTOL fighter in the 1970's. It used the Ejector Wing concept where high pressure air was ducted from the exhaust to slots in the wings and canards to generate vertical lift; unfortunately, it was never able to generate sufficient thrust for vertical takeoff and the project was cancelled with the prototype unflown. This diagram depicts an operational version in inboard side and top views.
Cyan 17
NERVA nuclear rocket
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Title XX: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
NERVA nuclear rocket Cyanotype Blueprint. The diagram is a replica/reproduction of a vintage 1962 Aerojet diagram of a "hot bleed" design for the NERVA nuclear rocket, which was to use a solid-core nuclear reactor to heat liquid hydrogen to generate thrust. Just the thing if you are planning on building an ark to get the frak off this rock and head to Mars
Cyan 18
Saturn V Apollo Flight configuration
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Saturn V Apollo Flight configuration: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Saturn V Apollo Flight Configuration diagram, including a cutaway diagram of the Saturn V with callouts to all major subcomponents.
Cyan 19
Boeing 2707-300 Inboard Profile
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Boeing 2707-300 Inboard Profile: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Inbaord views of the profile and plan of the Boeing Model 2707-300 SST, the final design of the supersonic transport that was sadly cancelled before the prototypes could be built.
Cyan 20
2707-200 SST isometric cutaway
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
2707-200 SST isometric cutaway: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
The Boeing 2707-200 was a supersonic transport designed in the mid-1960s, intending to be the future of air travel. The initial design was the 2707-100 with distinctive variable geometry "swing wings;" the -200 differed mainly in having canards. The final design, the 2707-300, dispensed with both the canards and the swing wings, having a fixed double-delta configuration. This diagram shows the -200 configuration in glorious internal detail, providing both internal structure and seating arrangements
Cyan 21
German A-4 (V-2) cutaway
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
German A-4 (V-2) cutaway : $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A cutaway illustration of the A-4 (V-2) rocket, drawn in Germanyt during WWII. The original was found in the NASA-Marshal archives and scanned for me and painstakingly cleaned and prepared. A fantastic piece.
Cyan 22
Aerojet Sea Dragon
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Sea Dragon: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
The Aerojet "Sea Dragon" was designed by Bob Truax in the early 1960s and was one of the largest rockets ever conceived. Able to put a million pounds of payload into orbit, it was to have been a simple Big Dumb Booster using basic pressure fed engines and shipyard tolerances. This diagram includes both the exterior layout and the inboard profile of the six hundred foot long monster.
Cyan 23
USS Monitor
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
USS Monitor: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A reproduction via cyanotype of a vintage diagram of Captain John Ericsson's USS Monitor. This Civil War ironclad is famous for its battle against the CSS Virginia (formerly the Merrimac). The diagram shows plan, side and end views of the vessel in cutaway, providing internal details.
Cyan 24
Lockheed X-24C
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Lockheed X-24C: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
In the mid 1970's Lockheed designed a hypersonic rocket powered vehicle to be a follow-on to the X-24A and B lifting bodies. Equipped to fit an underslung engine module, the Lockheed X-24C-L301 could briefly fly under scramjet power.
Cyan 25
X-20/Titan IIIC wind tunnel model
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
X-20/Titan IIIC wind tunnel model: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
An early 1960s Martin Company diagram of a wind tunnel model of the X-20 Dyna Soar spaceplane atop the Titan IIIC launch vehicle, showing not only external configuration bu the internal construction and the shape of the "plumes" that would be added behind the solid rocket motor nozzles to reflect the shape of the exhaust.
Cyan 26
Lockheed L-2000 SST Genera Arrangement
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Lockheed L-2000 SST Genera Arrangement: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
The Lockheed L-2000 was a mid-1960's design for a supersonic transport. Competing against - and losing to - the Boeing 2707, The L-2000 was a Mach 3 double-delta design that built off Lockheeds experience with the SR-71 Blackbird family. This blueprint features a reproduction of a vintage Lockheed diagram showing the L-2000 general arrangement (3-view) drawing.
Cyan 27
Lockheed L-2000 SST Inboard Profile
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Lockheed L-2000 SST Inboard Profile: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
The Lockheed L-2000 was a mid-1960's design for a supersonic transport. Competing against - and losing to - the Boeing 2707, The L-2000 was a Mach 3 double-delta design that built off Lockheeds experience with the SR-71 Blackbird family. This blueprint features a reproduction of a vintage Lockheed diagram showing inboard views (plan, profile and sections) of the L-2000, in particualr providing the seating arrangement.
Cyan 28
Boeing X-20 Dyna Soar General Arrangement
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
Boeing X-20 Dyna Soar General Arrangement: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Boeing diagram showing in good detail the Model 844-2050E X-20 Dyna Soar, the ulitmate configuration. The prototype of this spaceplane was 40% complete when the program was cancelled in 1963. Diagram givesnot only overall configuration but numerous sections and scrap views; included is the rarely seen rear view.
Cyan 29
X-20 Dyna Soar Inboard Profile
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
X-20 Dyna Soar Inboard Profile: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
A 1962 Boeing inboard profile diagram of the Model 2050E X-20 Dyna Soar one-man spaceplane. Very detailed with inboard profile and numerous sections, showing internal layout, equipment and cockpit. This version of the X-20 was effectively the final design; the first prototype was built to this configuration and was about 40% complete when the program was cancelled. The Dyna Soar was originally intended to be a sub-orbital research vehicle, launched most of the way across the planet atop a Titan I ICBM; the final design was to be fully orbital, launched by a Titan IIIC. Included in the diagram is the "transition" section that would connect the spaceplane to the Titan Transtage, with a Thiokol XM-92 solid rocket abort motor.
Cyan 30
UA-1207 SRM for Titan IIIM
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
UA-1207 SRM: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Titan IIIM Solid Rocket Motor Launch mount cyanotype blueprint. The UA-1207 was an extended seven-segment version of the solid rocket motor used on the Titan IIIC, specifically for the Titan IIIM. The Titan IIIM was an unbuilt variant designed specifically to launch the Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) for the USAF. This diagram shows how the motor would have been serviced while on the pad at the Western test Range (Vandenberg, California). This diagrams shows the motor and its fittings & hardware in good detail.
Cyan 31
UA-1205 SRM for Titan IIIC
Closeup 1

Closeup 2
UA-1205 SRM: $30.00

Don't forget the postage... in US: $7.00
Titan IIIC Solid Rocket Motor Launch mount cyanotype blueprint. This is a new actual blueprint, made by hand using the cyanotyping process that results in white lines on a Prussian-blue background. The UA-1205 was five-segment solid rocket motor used on the Titan IIIC, the standard launch vehicle for the USAF for decades This diagram shows how the motor would be serviced while on the pad at the Western test Range (Vandenberg, California). This diagrams shows the motor and its fittings & hardware in good detail.
See the old catalog of blueprints for reference.

Large Format Vellum Blueprints

coming soon