Dr. Karen Nyberg is an engineer, astronaut, and artist who has had an awe-inspiring nearly thirty years of experience in human spaceflight. She made her trips to space aboard Space Shuttle Discovery and the International Space Station. Karen took her lifelong love of creating art with her to space. While there, she captured the beauty of space through her photography. When Karen lived on the International Space Station, she and NASA invited crafters from around the world to join a project to stitch together a global community quilt. Karen stitched a 9” square star-themed quilt block in space and encouraged others to create their own star-themed quilt blocks on earth. No one realized how quickly the project would grow. NASA received over 2400 quilt squares from around the world. Many of the squares were accompanied by letters and personal stories of how space travel and the worldwide space program had impacted lives. A team of NASA and Johnson Space Center volunteers quilted the squares together and created 28 king sized quilts. The quilts were showcased at the 40th Anniversary International Quilt Festival in Houston. Quilt blocks from Ohio and California were put next to blocks from Australia and Japan. A New Orleans block was placed next to a block from Russia and the UK. The panels spanned the globe and the completed quilts represent a truly interconnected world. Recently retired from NASA, Karen is currently pursuing interests in the areas of conservation and sustainability, fully appreciating the responsibility for innovation and technology to strive to meet those needs. Karen lives in Houston, Texas with her husband, Astronaut Doug Hurley, their dinosaur loving son, Jack, and two sweet dogs, Leo and Luke.