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Space Shuttle Window Wall Decal Faux Spaceship View Outer Space Vinyl Sticker Room Decor

Rocketing space travel straight out of this world and into the room.

This is a beautiful choice for buyers creating a space-themed bedroom, sci-fi study corner, gaming room, dorm wall, or imaginative reading space with a more cinematic and exploratory feel.

 

MySticky’s faux spaceship window wall decal is designed to make the wall look as though it opens directly into outer space. The exact design shown here features a futuristic spacecraft-style viewing frame surrounding a dramatic scene with a white space shuttle-style orbiter in the foreground, a second smaller spacecraft in the distance, a large planet to the right, and deep blue nebula-like space clouds stretching across the background. Once installed, it gives the wall the feeling of a sci-fi observation window rather than a flat decorative sticker.

With the visual lane is so clear, this decal works beautifully for buyers creating space-themed bedrooms, astronomy-inspired rooms, sci-fi gaming setups, dorm rooms, study spaces, reading corners, and imaginative playrooms. It has enough clean structure to feel polished, yet enough cosmic atmosphere to feel transportive and visually exciting.

The result is immersive, futuristic, and highly room-defining. Instead of simply decorating the wall, it gives the room a view beyond Earth.

 

AVAILABLE SIZES

Please select an appropriate size from the drop-down menu.

Size in Inches

 

Small

13.78" (W) x 6.30" (H)

 

Medium

27.56" (W) x 12.20" (H)

 

Large

39.37" (W) x 17.72" (H)

 

Size in Centimeters

 

Small

35 cm (W) x 16 cm (H)

 

Medium

70 cm (W) x 31 cm (H)

 

Large

100 cm (W) x 45 cm (H)

 

A choice of a smaller size eloquently above a desk, bookshelf, reading nook, or tighter wall space is a well made choice. A medium size creates a balanced focal point above a bed, dresser, gaming setup, or study table. A large size is especially effective when you want the decal to read more like a true spaceship viewing panel and carry more of the wall visually.

 

NOW, THE GOOD STUFF……

A-grade matt-finish vinyl for a true painted-on look

Machine precision cut for a cleaner, sharper finish

No white or clear borders

Ultra-vibrant inks for stronger visual depth

Full illustrated step-by-step instructions included

Removable application

Not repositionable

Not reusable

 

The goal is simple: cleaner finish, stronger wall presence, and a design that feels intentional once installed.

 

SURFACES THEY CAN BE APPLIED TO

Smooth matt-finish painted walls

Mirrors

Metal

Fridges

Windows

Some vehicle surfaces

For most aspiring star children, this design is enjoyed at its best indoors where the spaceship window effect can become part of the room atmosphere. Vehicle use is possible, although the decal is not laminated, so surface wear may scratch it over time.

 

ESSENTIAL REQUIREMENTS / BEFORE YOU APPLY

All wall stickers must be left flat for 24 hours after removal from the postal tube.

If the decal still curls after 24 hours, allow more time until it remains flat. A little weight, such as books, may help it relax fully.

Do not install above heat sources such as radiators, as heat can weaken the adhesive.

These decals are best suited to matt-finished walls. Silk and satin finishes may encourage peeling.

Wall paint must be left to dry for a minimum of 3 weeks. It may feel dry sooner, but moisture can still remain trapped beneath the surface.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us through eBay messenger.


 PACKAGE INCLUDES

1 x Wall Decal


HOW & WHY THIS MYSTICKY DESIGN IS SPECIAL:

This is not a generic space sticker. This design sits in a very specific visual lane:

Faux spaceship viewing window

Space shuttle-style orbiter artwork

Second spacecraft in the distance

Planet-view outer-space backdrop

Blue nebula / cosmic cloud atmosphere

Clean sci-fi panel silhouette

Room-defining space-travel mood without visual clutter

The amalgamation gives the piece broad appeal. It can naturally speak to buyers shopping for space shuttle wall décor, outer space window decals, sci-fi room art, astronaut bedroom décor, gaming room wall stickers, and futuristic study-space wall décor all at once.

 IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER / TERMS & CONDITIONS

Our decals here at MySticky are designed for one-time application only.

They cannot be reused, and they are not repositionable after installation.

MySticky is not liable for mistakes made during installation.

Because this is a DIY product, correct application is the buyer’s responsibility.

Instructions are provided as a guide; final installation depends on the buyer’s own care and method.

Images are not to scale.

By purchasing, the buyer agrees to these terms and conditions.

 RETURNS

 Theoretically.....If the wrong size is selected, returns are accepted under the MySticky made-to-order standard.

 Return conditions:

The item must be returned with tracked shipping

The item must be returned with all contents

The item must be received back in appropriate condition for inspection

 Due to the fact these items are made to order and cannot be resold, approved size-based returns are refunded at 80% of the purchase price.

 DAMAGES

 If an item arrives damaged in transit, please do not use it.

Instead, send a photo of the damage through eBay message with a short description of the issue.

Damage must be reported before use or the issue may be voided.

A return is not required for transit damage review.

 CUSTOM WORK AT MYSTICKY

 Beyond standard designs, MySticky also takes on fully custom artwork projects when commissioned. Additional custom visual work may be available depending on printer size limits, artwork requirements, and production fit.

 ABOUT MYSTICKY

 MySticky creates distinctive, high-quality wall decals and wall murals designed to help rooms feel more personal, more expressive, and more complete.

MYSTICKY SPACE TRAVEL FULL END OF LISTING BLOG

This exact decal works so well because it connects directly to one of the deepest imaginative traditions people have ever had: the desire to look past the horizon and ask what waits beyond it. Long before spaceflight became engineering, it lived as vision. It lived in sketches, theories, observatories, science fiction, and the stubborn belief that human beings would eventually find a way to leave the ground and cross into the dark above us.

The history behind that dream reaches much farther back than the Space Age itself. Smithsonian’s history of rocket science notes that the earliest military rockets trace back to China in the 13th century, while NASA’s own educational history of rocketry points to Konstantin Tsiolkovsky’s late-19th- and early-20th-century work as one of the key moments when rockets began to be understood not merely as weapons or curiosities, but as the practical means of reaching space. In other words, space travel was imagined before it was built, and it was built mathematically before it was ever flown.

That shift from imagination to engineering is one of the reasons space-themed wall décor continues to resonate so strongly. Buyers are not only responding to stars, planets, or spacecraft. They are responding to a long human story: first we wondered, then we calculated, then we tested, and finally we launched. NASA’s historical material on Robert H. Goddard makes this especially tangible. Goddard is widely regarded as a foundational rocket pioneer, and in 1926 he launched the first liquid-fueled rocket in Auburn, Massachusetts, proving that the kinds of propulsion concepts required for serious spaceflight were no longer theoretical abstractions.

Once rocketry crossed that threshold, the 20th century moved quickly. NASA’s history of Sputnik explains that the Soviet launch of Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957 marked the dawn of the Space Age. It was the first artificial satellite, and its success did more than put a metal sphere into orbit; it changed politics, science, engineering, education, and public imagination all at once. NASA also notes that Sputnik helped lead directly to the creation of NASA in 1958, which means one successful satellite launch effectively helped reorganize the future of American space research.

Human spaceflight followed almost immediately. NASA’s human-spaceflight history records that Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space on April 12, 1961, orbiting Earth aboard Vostok 1 in a mission lasting 108 minutes. That fact still matters emotionally because it marks the moment when “space travel” stopped being only a dream or a machine problem and became a lived human experience. Someone actually left Earth, saw the planet from orbit, and returned with proof that human beings could inhabit that impossible environment, however briefly.

From there, the timeline accelerated into one of the most iconic sequences in modern history. NASA and the Smithsonian both treat Apollo as a defining chapter not only in American achievement, but in the broader human story of exploration. Apollo 11 launched in July 1969, and on July 20 humans walked on the Moon for the first time. NASA’s mission overview also notes that an estimated 650 million people watched Armstrong step onto the lunar surface. That number is worth pausing over, because it reminds us that space exploration has always been both technological and cultural. It does not only change what scientists know; it changes what ordinary people believe is possible.

That legacy matters directly to this decal because the central vehicle in the image is not a vague sci-fi spaceship. It is clearly modeled in the visual language of the space shuttle era: a white winged orbiter, visible engines, and the unmistakable silhouette of reusable American shuttle design. NASA’s STS-1 material explains that Space Shuttle Columbia launched on April 12, 1981, inaugurating the shuttle program and beginning a new era of reusable crewed spacecraft. In visual culture, the shuttle became one of the most recognizable symbols of real space travel because it looked both advanced and attainable: not only a rocket, but something closer to a ship, a vehicle, a machine people could imagine boarding.

That is one reason the faux spacecraft window concept feels so strong in a room. The decal does not simply show “space” in an abstract sense. It frames space as a place viewed from inside a vessel. That detail changes the emotional experience of the artwork. You are not looking at a poster of the cosmos. You are looking through a ship-style viewing portal into a scene that includes a shuttle-style orbiter, a distant craft, blue nebular clouds, and a planet suspended in shadow and light. The wall begins to behave like a boundary between here and somewhere farther out.

The shuttle era also helped create another space-age icon: Hubble. NASA records that the Hubble Space Telescope was launched aboard shuttle Discovery on STS-31 in April 1990, and Hubble was designed from the beginning to be visited and repaired by astronauts. That marriage of shuttle engineering and scientific observation matters because it changed how the public experienced the universe. Space was no longer only a destination for heroic missions; it became a platform for seeing farther, older, and deeper into the cosmos than ever before.

In parallel, deep-space exploration was stretching the human imagination outward. NASA’s Voyager mission history notes that Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 launched in 1977 to study the outer planets, and Voyager 1 later crossed into interstellar space in 2012 while continuing to transmit data. That fact is powerful because it reframes the scale of exploration altogether. The human body has traveled only so far, yet human-made machines have gone vastly farther, carrying instruments, engineering, and in Voyager’s case even a Golden Record meant to represent life on Earth. Space décor that includes planets, ships, and deep-blue cosmic fields taps into that same sense of scale: the realization that the frontier is both intimate in imagination and almost incomprehensibly large in reality.

Meanwhile, space ceased to be only a place for short missions and became somewhere people could live and work continuously. NASA’s International Space Station material explains that the ISS has been continuously occupied since 2000, evolving into a major microgravity research platform and, in a very literal sense, humanity’s home in space. For buyers creating a study, dorm, or office environment, that detail matters more than it might first appear to. Space exploration is no longer only about momentary triumphs; it is also about sustained presence, long-term learning, and building environments where thinking, observing, and living can continue beyond Earth.

Modern astronomy extends that story even further. NASA’s Webb mission material explains that the James Webb Space Telescope launched on December 25, 2021 and was designed to study every phase in the history of the universe, from the first luminous structures after the Big Bang to the formation of solar systems. That is an extraordinary sentence to sit beside room décor, because it shows how far the underlying human impulse has come. The same imaginative line that runs from early rocketry through Goddard, Sputnik, Gagarin, Apollo, the shuttle, Hubble, Voyager, and the ISS now reaches into instruments built specifically to study cosmic origins.

That is why a decal like this can do more than decorate a wall. For a child, it can make a bedroom feel more imaginative and more future-facing. For a student, it can make a study corner feel a little more connected to curiosity, science, and the scale of the unknown. For a gamer or sci-fi fan, it can give the room a cleaner cinematic anchor. For a parent or gift buyer, it can become the piece that changes the room from generic to exploratory. The exact design shown here is especially strong because its visual storytelling is so clear: a spacecraft window, a shuttle-style orbiter, a distant ship, a planet, and the luminous blue darkness between them.

At its best, space décor is never only about stars. It is about perspective. It is about remembering that human beings imagined this before they built it, then built it before they mastered it, and are still mastering it now. A room piece that carries that visual language does something special: it invites wonder, but it also invites ambition. It suggests that the wall is not the limit. It suggests that the view can continue beyond it.

That is the lane this decal occupies at full strength. It is not simply a space sticker. It is a spacecraft-view wall feature rooted in one of humanity’s oldest and most enduring dreams: to leave Earth, look back, and keep going.

The Moon landing did not end the dream of space travel. In many ways, it changed the dream. Apollo proved that human beings could leave Earth, cross the distance to another world, land there, and return. After that, the question shifted. It was no longer only can we reach space? It became how do we make spaceflight more repeatable, more useful, and more connected to everyday human ambition? That is the chapter this decal quietly echoes so well, because its central vehicle is not simply a generic spaceship. It is clearly modeled in the visual language of the shuttle era: a white orbiter with wings, engines, and the unmistakable silhouette of reusable American spaceflight. NASA records that STS-1, the first shuttle mission, launched Columbia on April 12, 1981, beginning what NASA itself described as a new era in spaceflight. The shuttle mattered not just because it flew, but because it looked like a vessel people could imagine traveling in. It brought spaceflight visually closer to the language of ships, aircraft, and transport rather than one-time rockets alone.

That shift in visual language matters for room décor more than it might seem at first. Apollo imagery often feels heroic, historic, and monumental. Shuttle imagery feels active, inhabitable, and cinematic. It suggests not only that space was reached, but that space could be revisited, studied, worked in, and built upon. That is one reason spacecraft-window decals feel so strong in bedrooms, study spaces, and gaming setups. They transform space from a distant symbol into an environment. The wall stops behaving like a flat divider and starts behaving more like a viewing panel. In this exact design, the frame itself reinforces that idea. It is not a soft cloud border or a whimsical cutout. It reads as a structural observation window, something you would look through from inside a ship, station, or orbital craft. That subtle design choice gives the piece more narrative force because the customer is not merely looking at space; they are looking out into it.

The shuttle era also changed how people thought about the purpose of missions. It was not just about spectacular firsts. It was also about science, orbit, servicing, and infrastructure. NASA’s International Space Station material explains that the ISS has been continuously occupied since 2000 and has served as a classroom, laboratory, and proving ground in orbit, hosting nearly 300 astronauts and thousands of experiments. That is an astonishing development in the longer history of exploration. Human beings moved from dreaming about space, to touching the Moon, to maintaining a long-term inhabited research platform in orbit around Earth. In practical terms, that means space has become not only a frontier, but a workplace, a research site, and a lived environment. That progression makes the “window into space” concept even more powerful, because humanity now genuinely has structures in orbit with windows, experiments, routines, and daily life beyond the atmosphere.

At the same time, our machines were traveling much farther than our bodies could. NASA’s Voyager mission material explains that Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 launched in 1977 to explore the outer planets, and Voyager 1 later crossed into interstellar space. That fact still carries an emotional charge because it expands the scale of the story so dramatically. Human spaceflight has remained relatively close to Earth compared with the vastness beyond, yet human-made machines have already traveled into the space between stars. A room piece like this taps into that same feeling of outward reach. The planet in the decal, the distant spacecraft, and the blue-black clouded depths all suggest that the view does not end at low orbit. It continues outward into a much larger unknown. For many buyers, especially children, students, gamers, and science-fiction fans, that is part of the magic. The decal does not merely say “space.” It says distance, travel, mystery, and possibility.

Modern telescopes extended that horizon even further. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope resources explain that Webb launched on December 25, 2021 and was designed to study every phase in the history of the universe, from the earliest luminous structures after the Big Bang to the formation of solar systems and the evolution of our own Solar System. Webb orbits the Sun about 1.5 million kilometers from Earth, far beyond low Earth orbit. That matters because it shows how space exploration now stretches across multiple layers at once: human crews in orbit, robotic probes moving outward, and giant observatories looking backward through cosmic time. A space-themed room, then, is not only borrowing from the aesthetics of science fiction. It is borrowing from one of the richest ongoing intellectual projects humanity has ever undertaken. That is why a decal like this can feel so much larger than a sticker. It hints at that ongoing story every time someone looks at it.

And now the story is moving forward again in a more visibly crewed way. NASA’s Artemis program states that Artemis II is planned as a crewed mission around the Moon, part of the broader Moon-to-Mars framework. Artemis matters symbolically because it links the early age of lunar exploration to a new era of sustained deep-space preparation. Apollo proved a landing was possible. Artemis is framed as part of a longer return — a bridge toward future lunar presence and, eventually, Mars. That makes modern space décor especially timely. The old dream has returned, but with new technology, new infrastructure, and a longer view of human expansion into space. A decal that presents a spacecraft window, a planet, and a ship in flight fits naturally into that renewed moment. It feels classic because it inherits the visual language of earlier missions; however, it also feels current because the project of moving farther outward is very much alive.

That is one reason this exact design has such strong crossover power in a shop like MySticky. For a child, it can be the piece that turns a room from generic into exploratory. For a student, it can make a study area feel more aspirational and curiosity-driven. For a gamer, it can give the room a cinematic sci-fi anchor without becoming chaotic. For a parent or grandparent, it can become a gift that feels imaginative, educational, and lasting all at once. Even the color structure helps: the deep blues and blacks give the scene atmosphere and mystery, while the white shuttle and illuminated planet keep the composition readable and emotionally clear. The decal does not overwhelm the wall. Instead, it creates one focused narrative image: a ship in flight, a second craft beyond it, and a world waiting in the distance.

That is the deeper reason space-themed wall art keeps its hold on people. It speaks to something older than trends. Long before satellites, telescopes, and reusable spacecraft, people looked upward and wondered what could be reached. Then came the equations, the launches, the failures, the recoveries, the landings, the stations, the probes, and the observatories. Today, that long chain of human effort can be distilled into a single room view: a window-shaped frame, a spacecraft, a planet, and the dark beauty between them. This decal works because it preserves that feeling. It does not merely show outer space as background. It presents space as destination, pathway, and point of view. And once that goes on a wall, the room no longer feels closed. It feels connected to one of humanity’s oldest and boldest ambitions.