There is a SUPER Full Moon:
January, February and March 2019.
Excerpt from article (the link to entire article is below):
"The
next supermoon comes with the January 21 full moon, which is, moreover,
to stage a total lunar eclipse. This supermoon on January 21 ushers in
the first in a series of three full supermoons falling on January 21,
February 19 and March 21, 2019. Of these, the February 19th full moon
showcases the closest and largest full supermoon of 2019.
"Supermoons
don’t look bigger to the eye than ordinary full moons, although
experienced observers say they can detect a difference.
"But
supermoons do look brighter than ordinary full moons! The angular
diameter of a supermoon is about 7 percent greater than that of the
average-size full moon and 14 percent greater than the angular diameter
of a micro-moon (year’s farthest and smallest full moon). Yet, a
supermoon exceeds the area (disk size) and brightness of an average-size
full moon by some 15 percent – and the micro-moon by some 30 percent.
For a visual reference, the size difference between a supermoon and
micro-moon is proportionally similar to that of a U.S. quarter versus a
U.S. nickel."