Katherine Johnson's Orbits Pin
Katherine Johnson was a mathematician who calculated the flight paths for many missions during her more than three decades with NASA. This pin is b...
View full details50% of profits from the Women in Science line go to:
Katherine Johnson was a mathematician who calculated the flight paths for many missions during her more than three decades with NASA. This pin is b...
View full detailsIn 1967, while Jocelyn Bell Burnell was studying the data from a giant radio telescope that she had built with other graduate students, she noticed...
View full detailsIn 1967, while Jocelyn Bell Burnell was studying the data from a giant radio telescope that she had built with other graduate students, she noticed...
View full detailsAlice Ball, pioneering chemist and developer of the first effective treatment for leprosy, is celebrated in our new hard enamel pin, the first in o...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our new hard enamel pin, the second in our Women in Science...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our new hard enamel necklace, part of our Women in Science ...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our new hard enamel cufflinks, part of our Women in Science...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our new hard enamel necklace, part of our Women in Science ...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our new hard enamel earrings, part of our Women in Science ...
View full detailsRear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneering computer scientist and educator, is celebrated in our hard enamel earrings, part of our Women in Science seri...
View full detailsAda Lovelace published the first computer program in 1843. She was also the first person to describe a general purpose computer. This pin, part of ...
View full detailsAda Lovelace published the first computer program in 1843. She was also the first person to describe a general purpose computer. This necklace, par...
View full detailsAda Lovelace published the first computer program in 1843. She was also the first person to describe a general-purpose computer. These earrings, pa...
View full detailsRosalind Franklin is known for taking the crucial photo of DNA that led to the discovery of its structure. But she contributed far more than a ph...
View full detailsRosalind Franklin is known for taking the crucial photo of DNA that led to the discovery of its structure. But she contributed far more than a phot...
View full detailsRosalind Franklin is known for taking the crucial photo of DNA that led to the discovery of its structure. But she contributed far more than a phot...
View full detailsSave 25% when you get the set! Includes: Grace Hopper Nanosecond Earrings Grace Hopper Nanosecond Necklace Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, pioneerin...
View full detailsSave 23% when you get all four of our Women in Science pins as a set! Includes: Alice Ball Chaulmoogra Seed Pin Grace Hopper Nanosecond Pin Ada Lo...
View full detailsSave 25% when you get all three of our Women in Science earrings! Includes: Grace Hopper Nanosecond Earrings Ada Lovelace Punchcard Earrings Rosal...
View full detailsSave 25% when you get the set! Includes: Ada Lovelace Punchcard Earrings Ada Lovelace Punchcard Necklace Ada Lovelace published the first compute...
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