Did NASA Fake Moon Photographs?

A Short Story

Okay, this doesn’t have much to do with travel but I thought I’d tell it anyway.

Short Answer • Yes and No

Back when I was a much younger man I worked in photographic science for a company that engineered specialized photographic equipment. I was a field engineer and dealt with systems in medicine, aerial imagery and even the space program.

I worked closely with our companies head salesman Gene, who had been with the company since its beginning. He had developed friendships with a lot of senior people in the industry, many of them in government. One of his favorite customers was NASA and the headquarters of NASA’s photographic operation was at the Johnson Space Flight Center in Houston. The head of the “still photography” section was a fantastic gentleman named Ludy Benjamin and the three of us spent some time working on photographic problems with a bit of drinking and good eating on the side. I really liked Ludy and he had a close relationship with all the programs astronauts.

One of Ludy’s jobs was to teach astronauts how to use cameras and the mistakes astronauts made were a constant source of frustration and a fair amount of humor. One example was Apollo 8 where Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders became the first humans to witness and photograph an Earthrise as they came around from the back of the moon. Their mission was the first to leave Earth orbit and travel to the moon, orbit the moon and return to Earth. Upon their return Ludy discovered that they had put the colored filters that were to be used on the black and white cameras on the color film cameras. The joke became “what color is the moon?” as the developed film showed it was bright red, or at times blue or sometimes green. How about green cheese?

After Apollo 11 with Neil Armstrong and “Buzz” Aldrin walking on the moon, taking lots of beautiful photographs, NASA management came to Ludy with a PR problem. There were pictures of the Lunar lander, the astronauts, the flag and many showed one or two of those elements, but none showed all three. NASA really wanted an iconic image showing an astronaut, the American flag and the Lunar Lander.

This was 1969, no fancy graphic computers, no Photoshop or CGI systems and nobody thought they were going to create the seed of a conspiracy. Ludy’s lab, using multiple exposures, masks and a little creativity added the American flag between “Buzz” Aldrin and the Lunar Lander in one photograph. Hell they even had the Sunlight direction right but the flag and pole wasn’t casting a shadow.

As I recollect it was a couple of years before anyone commented on the missing shadow. The first conspiracy nuts were more concerned about why there weren’t any stars in the lunar sky showing in those photos. As far as I am aware there is only that one slightly faked photo from the American moon landings.

The Apollo 13 Photo

A year later Apollo 13 headed off to the third moon landing and everyone knows that story. The Service Module exploded early in the mission and it was a tribute to engineering and human skill that got them home safe.

As the Apollo capsule was approaching re-entry the astronauts had a photographic assignment – take pictures of the damaged Service Module after the separation. They only had a couple of minutes to point a camera out a porthole and photograph the damage to provide NASA some idea as to what had happened. Grabbing a Hasselblad camera Jim Lovell pointed it at the Service Module and clicked off a couple of shots.

Unfortunately the camera he grabbed had a wide angle lens attached and the resulting negative only showed a tiny black dot on a clear piece of film. Ludy sent one of the negatives to our lab to see if we could get a usable photograph out of it. We were eager to try, considering the significance of the negative but after a week in the lab we hadn’t produced anything usable.

The Writing On The Wall

A month later Ludy sent us a photographic print produced by the computer lab at a facility named The Jet Propulsion Laboratory out in California. It was a remarkable image and we wanted to ask how it was created. A few months later I talked with one of their people and he explained how they had “digitized” the image and had a computer compare it to a photograph of an undamaged Service Module. By comparing shadows and shapes the computer painted an image of the damaged module. That was the first indication I had that maybe I needed to look into computers and digital imaging but it was far from the last.

Images From A Florida Keys Drive

Photographic impressions from our travels…

Key West Sunset

Some states are blessed and Florida is especially blessed with some of Americas best beaches, but if you’re into boating and water-sports there is no place better in North America than the Florida Keys.

Mangroves

Noted for North America’s only coral reefs the incredible keys offer amazing boating opportunities, incredible fishing and seafood with a culture that is all its own.

This string of keys (islands) stretches from Miami south for a hundred miles to the capital of the Conch Republic, Key West.

Bahia Honda Park

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Images From the Pubs of Dublin

Photographic impressions from our travels…


We’re not sure of anywhere else on Earth where pubs are celebrated more than in Dublin. Irish pubs are an expression of the very soul of Ireland.

Home and family may be the foundation of civilization, but to become a real society you have to have a pub.

It’s mandatory on any visit to Dublin to spend some of your time in a pub. Pubs are Ireland and a cornerstone of Irish society.

Exploring South America

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Images Sailing Through Antarctica

Photographic impressions from our travels…

A morning approach to the frozen continent

Seabirds glide overhead as whales breach and penguins appear as fast moving black torpedos everywhere in the water.

Sailing into Paradise Bay in Antartica with mountains rising in the background and icebergs drift around us. Moving nearer the coast you see it rimmed with massive ice shelfs grounded in the water near the shore. Everything is blue and blue-white with touches of dark rock showing.


People Watching • A Gallery

People watching is a fun part of travel. Often the most mundane scenes can seem exotic when walking the streets of a new city. This world is full of incredible sights but there are also lots of interesting people too.

Feeding pidgins in Vigo, Spain
Army patrol Lyon, France
Music lesson Sydney, Australia
Ships passing in the Panama Canal
The lookout Cartagena, Columbia
Selling crafts Bora Bora
On patrol Cabo San Lucas
Todays catch? St. Lucia
Fisherman Santorini
Fresh fruit Hoi An, Vietnam
Ti Che on the banks of the Seine
Watching people watching people, Avignon, France
The selfie Savannah
School boys Wertzberg Germany
Ladies surf spot Manley Beach, Australia
Going to be a wet day. A German village
For the grace of God – France
A moment on the streets of Paris
Flower seller Lyon, France

Images From Terra del Fuego

Photographic impressions from our travels…

Terra del Fuego National Park Argentina

Literally where civilization ends. The only thing south from Terra del Fuego is Antarctica.

The stark scenery is amazing and the incredible amounts of wildlife are unbelievable.

The lighthouse in the Beagle Channel, a body of water that cuts through South America from the Atlantic to The Pacific. The channel is named after the H.M.S. Beagle and the expedition made famous by Charles Darwin.


Discovering Kruger National Park, South Africa

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