A newly adapted temperature measurement technique is presented for measuring aerospace relevant high surface temperatures. A comparatively cheap, available digital single-lens reflex camera is used as the imaging system for a two-color ratio pyrometry technique. This provides a highly spatially resolved imaging system that uses the blue, green, and red pixels for the ratio pyrometry measurements. At the Centre for Hypersonics at the University of Queensland, a Canon EOS 400D camera was spectrally calibrated using a tungsten filament lamp and a monochromator. With the knowledge of the spectral response of the pixels, emission ratio calculations determining the temperature can be undertaken for images of any surface, which fulfills the requirement of radiating as a gray body. For this particular camera, the measurable temperature limits were determined to be between approximately 1500 and 3000 K. Two tests cases are presented demonstrating the use of this technique: first, a heated carbon-carbon sample tested in the X2 expansion tube, and second, a material sample in a plasma torch. In both cases, the temperature measurements were validated using an alternative method of measurement, and the two-color ratio pyrometry measured temperatures were found to be within 5% of the alternative measurement. This technique provides a highly spatially resolved, yet comparatively cheap method of temperature measurement for hightemperature surfaces such as those encountered in the aerospace field. It is anticipated that this technique can help provide more detailed information of the surface state during future aerospace testing. Nomenclature c = speed of light, m · s −1 h = Plank constant, 6.626 × 10 −34 m 2 · kg · s −1 k = Boltzmann constant, 1.381 × 10 −23 m 2 · kg · s −2 · K −1 L B = black-body radiance, W · m −2 · sr −1 · m −1 L G = gray-body radiance, W · m −2 · sr −1 · m −1 T = temperature, K ∈ = emissivity, -λ = wavelength, m