Space News
space history and artifacts articles

Messages
space history discussion forums

Sightings
worldwide astronaut appearances

Resources
selected space history documents

Forum:Publications & Multimedia
Topic:Photos of Apollo missions on television
Want to register?
Who Can Post? Any registered users may post a reply.
About Registration You must be registered in order to post a topic or reply in this forum.
Your UserName:
Your Password:   Forget your password?
Your Reply:


*HTML is ON
*UBB Code is ON

Smilies Legend

Options Disable Smilies in This Post.
Show Signature: include your profile signature. Only registered users may have signatures.
*If HTML and/or UBB Code are enabled, this means you can use HTML and/or UBB Code in your message.

If you have previously registered, but forgotten your password, click here.

I made no attempt to put everything into chronological order, instead I did it by order of scenes.

The Apollo 15 slides, among several other missions, can be found here. I have scanned them at 4000 DPI so their resolution is stunning, you can see individual dots on the TV screen when you zoom in. Resolution is about 5476 by 3711.

The Apollo 15 slides I scanned yesterday marks the first big collection. Soon I will scan an Apollo 11 collection that I hope to win on eBay, I will do the same as I did with the Apollo 15 slides.

HeadshotNice presentation!

I am glad to know that I wasn't the only one sitting in front of a television screen taking pictures off the screen, a technique I honed during the Star Trek TOS run.

I still have my slide collections from Apollos 8, 9, 11, 15, 16 and 17. By all rights, I should just toss them as we can get great DVDs of the various moonwalks, but for some reason I just can't. Just another thing I'll leave to my kids after I am gone.

GACspaceguyI did the same from Apollo 15 through ASTP. All my photos are B&W though.
apollo16uvcThanks for your kind words.

I have send both of you an email regarding the slides. I will gladly scan them for free as long as you pay shipping costs.

apollo16uvc
quote:
Originally posted by Headshot:
I still have my slide collections from Apollos 8, 9, 11, 15, 16 and 17.
I received your slides. I am happy to say their condition is excellent, there is little to no fading.

Sorry everything is taking so long, I should have some time this week with a long weekend. I will need to do some more sorting to get everything in the right order, so the timelines will match up.

I have scanned your Kodachrome photos of the Apollo 8 parade, everybody can look at them here.

I also have done a quick scan of some TV slides, the exposure and focus is pretty good in most of them.

Will get back to you once I scanned a bunch. It are several hundred slides like you said, so this is going to take some time. I hope this is not a problem?

randyVery impressive.
BlackarrowAh yes, this takes me back! I took dozens of B&W photos of Apollos 14, 15, 16 and 17 with an old (but efficient) "bellows" camera that used, I think 126 half-plate film which I had to get developed at the local pharmacy. I then made 8" x 6" B&W prints in the school photo lab, and put them in my Apollo scrap-books, where they remain as good as the day they were printed. No fading, even after 45 - 47 years!

In order to get sharp focus, I had a bamboo pole with a padded tip which I pressed against the TV screen. I then lined the end of the pole up with the focal plane of the camera. I usually found that 1/30 second at about f5.6 - f8 did the job nicely. The camera had a leaf-shutter, which didn't produce those diagonal bright swathes you often get on TV photos taken with a camera which had a focal-plane shutter. Oh yes - the B&W film was 400 ASA for the proper exposure. One other thing: it was prudent to take the pictures in a darkened room with the curtains drawn. Light tended to put streaks and reflections on the image. Who wants the family dog superimposed on Charlie Duke operating the lunar drill?

One regret is that I tended to watch the LIVE transmissions without distractions, and then take the pictures during the news and recorded highlights. That meant I photographed all the "best bits" but very few of my pictures contain the magic words: "Live TV From the Moon."

apollo16uvcA slideshow of scans from 35mm slides used to photograph a TV screen. Slides borrowed from a collectSPACE member Bill to preserve them for future generations.

Hopefully this will bring some people back to the glory days of the USA space program, and perhaps television. Source scans are 5K.

There are several hundreds more slide in this collection, covering Apollo 8 through 17. Currently scanning through Apollo 10. Also found within the playlist is a slideshow of Apollo 15 TV broadcast slides.

Some can be found here under the 'Collectspace-2' designator. More scans and videos will be uploaded. Enjoy.

apollo16uvcGreat news!

A company that makes documentaries based on archival footage has asked if they can use some of my scans for an Apollo docu. I Will be giving them permission.

It should air sometime in the summer. They have produced Apollo docs before.

apollo16uvcI have uploaded Bill's photos of Apollo 8 and 9. Apollo 10 and 11 are still incomplete.

I am working hard on crunching out the further Apollo 11 EVA, more live photos inside the CM and the recovery photos before the 50th anniversary. Then I will be completing Apollo 10, 15 16 and 17.

It might be interesting to put the NASA EVA video and Bill's photos next to each other with audio. Shouldn't be too hard to sync?

Photography copyright Bill. Scanning work Niels.

ea757grrlThank you to all involved for making these slides available. I just spent a few moments looking through them and they're really something to see.

One note of interest: the slide that's a really good color close-up of an Apollo lunar helmet, with reflections in the visor, is from the opening titles for CBS News coverage of Apollo 11. (I tried to leave a comment on the Flickr page for that photo, but Flickr doesn't want to let me sign in.)

The slide in the album is reversed, by the way - the CBS footage has the reflected Earth and the astronaut's antenna on the opposite sides from what's seen here.

apollo16uvcI have uploaded all of Bill's slides in the Apollo 11 collection. See Flickr archive above. Unfortunately there are some missing slides here and there.

apollo16uvcExperience how Bill saw Apollo 11 at his grandparents:

apollo16uvc
quote:
Originally posted by ea757grrl:
I just spent a few moments looking through them and they're really something to see.
Thank you.
quote:
The slide in the album is reversed, by the way...
Are you sure? I checked, and I am sure I mounted the slide in the scanner correctly, the same as with the other slides. I did not apply any orientation correction, the provided file has the same orientation as the actual slide.
ea757grrl
quote:
Originally posted by apollo16uvc:
Are you sure?

You can see the relevant part from the original CBS Apollo 11 title sequence at 8:49 in this link, and compare.

As an aside, please don't think I am assigning you any blame at all for this. What I imagine happened was that the original transparency was mounted backward when it was put in the frame. Since the CBS Apollo 11 title sequence has been so seldom seen, that sort of reversal isn't something that would easily be picked up on. I just happened to recognize it because I've had it for years and am especially fond of it. Again, by no means was what I wrote intended to blame anybody for anything. It's one of those things that can happen in photography.

Contact Us | The Source for Space History & Artifacts

Copyright 1999-2024 collectSPACE. All rights reserved.





advertisement