art communication technology photo photographer amateur snapshot astronaut space apollo moon lost alone family memory tourist
✖ Via NASA History Division: Apollo 16 Lunar Surface Journal, Image Library, photo AS16-117-18841 (OF300) taken by astronaut Charles M. Duke on April 23, 1972 during the last EVA for Apollo 16 mission. [Hi-Res]

“HE WAS A TOURIST, a quarter-million miles from home. And like any traveler, he wanted to bring home a special memory.

So Apollo16 astronaut Charles M. Duke Jr. came up with a plan. Several months before his scheduled 1972 mission to the moon, Duke receveid permission from NASA to leave behind a family photograph. The picture—of Duke, wife Dorothy, and sons Charles III and Thomas—was taken by a friend in the Dukes’ Houston, Texas, backyard several week before the April 16 liftoff.

Astronaut Duke was given intensive photography training prior to the mission. He was taught about f-stops, exposure, and learned how to operate a custom Hasselblad camera. He took thousands of practice pictures and hundreds on the moon. But he never considered himself much of a photographer. “Just a point-and-shoot man,” he said decades later.

In the final hour of the final day of his three-day visit to the moon, Duke took out the shrink-wrapped family snapshot and gingerly placed it on the lunar surface, near the crater Descartes. It was a gift, his message to whoever might one day stumble upon it. He then took a snapshot of a snapshot. Evidence. A memory.” (Who We Were by Michael Williams, Richard Cahan and Nicholas Osborn, Chicago Cityfiles Press, 2008, p. 238).

Actually, he took at least three snaphotd : AS16-117-18839, AS16-117-18840 and AS16-117-18841, though the last one is clearly the best shot.

Previously on Skandalon: Apollo, Nicholas Osborn.



• Jan 10, 2010 link notes  [via] tagged: art  communication  technology  photo  photographer  amateur  snapshot  astronaut  space  Apollo  moon  lost  alone  family  memory  tourist 
art photo snapshot kodachrome technology vintage color christmas table food
✖ Via Square America: A Very Kodachrome Christmas (40 Slides from the golden era of Kodachrome)

The table is set

Previously on Skandalon



• Dec 25, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: art  photo  snapshot  kodachrome  technology  vintage  color  Christmas  table  food 
art photo vernacular common history vintage bw snapshot christmas girls amateur  reblog
✖ Via liquidnight: Anonymous - L.P. Hollander Co. Christmas Photograph, circa 1930, gelatin silver print (From In the Vernacular - Photography of the Everyday)

Check the book on Amazon. Read the press release from the Boston University Art Gallery. Read the Wikipedia entry for “vernacular photography”.

See also Square America



• Dec 25, 2009 link notes reblogged from liquidnight  [via] tagged: art  photo  vernacular  common  history  vintage  BW  snapshot  Christmas  girls  amateur 

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