The tide brings to Spain two cosmonaut costumes
<div style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://fotos.subefotos.com/18c4da802a87d9817907dfcff0b9820do.jpg"><img style="width: 525px; height: 541px;" src="http://fotos.subefotos.com/9af2f815723eb020f291ef44dd756be1o.jpg" id="imagen_original" /></a>
<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Leonid Blatún</span>,right after picking up the cosmonaut costumes.</span></div>
<span style="font-size:100%;">Sometimes the tide throws on the sand the remains of past eras. This time, it's been two cosmonaut costumes. One green, set aside for the stays in Space; and another one, orange, for the launch and the descent. </span>. . Like the shedding of a snake, they look like they still have that threatening living breath. A name engraved on the helmets. "<span style="font-style: italic;">Eliseev</span>". It doesn't help. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Julia Blatún</span>-from the 'Culture' state channel in Moscow- is more reassuring when she offers to help us looking for <span style="font-weight: bold;">Aleksei Eliseyev</span>, an old Soyuz' cosmonaut, to give him the costumes back after the shooting; provided it was him the "<span style="font-style: italic;">Eliseev</span>"whose name the costumes still display.
In a few months, they will be on the set, among hands which will handle them unskilfully and clumsily. Actors. The last receiver which <span style="font-weight: bold;">Zvezda</span>, -the Soviet contract which, in the 70s, bragged about making the most comfortable Space and Stratospheric costumes on Earth- could have imagined about twenty or thirty years ago. Costumes just like those which the tide brought, two days ago, to Leonid's hands.
<div style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 515px; height: 530px;" src="http://fotos.subefotos.com/f032bb6f697c07b03596703933453cb8o.jpg" id="imagen_original" />
</div>
There are 0 comments to this article: