RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘1969’

Woodstock photographer shares what it was like to photograph the 1969 music festival

21 Aug

Henry Diltz, an official photographer of the Woodstock music festival held in August 1969, has detailed his experience in a new six-minute video produced by Keeper and directed by Scott Hanson. Diltz captured thousands of photos during the three-day festival, which was attended by nearly half a million people.

‘It’s almost every day now, people are asking me to interviews, about Woodstock, to use my photos, and my remembrance of it,’ Diltz says in the new short film. The photographer explains how he landed the job, revealing that he was only able to attend the event thanks to lighting director Chip Monck, who sent Diltz a plane ticket and $ 500.

Unlike other photographers who attended the music festival, Diltz explains that he was allowed to shoot from a walkway built for the film crew, putting him directly in front of the concert stage. It’s from this position that Diltz was able to capture iconic photos of renowned artists, including one he says he managed to capture with all four members of The Who in the same image, something that was difficult using his widest lens.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Woodstock photographer shares what it was like to photograph the 1969 music festival

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Hasselblad re-issues 1969 press release on moon landing cameras

03 Jul

As part of the celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the Moon landings Hasselblad has re-issued the press release it sent out about the cameras used to take the first pictures from the moon’s surface. The release shows original black and white images from the trip of astronaut Buzz Aldrin taken by Neil Armstrong using the mission’s Hasselblad 500EL Data Camera with a Zeiss Biogon 60mm F5.6 lens.

A second 500EL was kept onboard to photograph events from the Eagle, and was mounted with a Zeiss Planar 80mm F2.8 lens. This camera was used by Michael Collins, who Hasselblad points out lost a SWC body in space in 1966 – he obviously was still not forgiven three years later!

NASA

All the cameras used were also fitted with a Reseau Plate close to the film plane that left reference marks on each frame to help scientists determine the distance between objects in the frame. Custom film backs were used to hold 70mm film that could handle 150-200 exposures per roll, and the camera that was used to shoot from the Moon’s surface was attached to Armstrong’s space suit.

The press release says that Hasselblad had been working with NASA on cameras for space missions since 1962 and the collaboration had seen many pictures from above the Earth before the 1969 landing. Victor Hasselblad, the company’s founder, flew to the USA to see the Apollo 11 launch in July that year and remained there until the mission returned – when he collected four rolls of color film and took them back to the Swedish factory. The release says ‘The pictures were so good that even we who had previously seen 9,000 Hasselblad images from space gasped for breath.’

$ (document).ready(function() { SampleGalleryV2({“containerId”:”embeddedSampleGallery_4928404142″,”galleryId”:”4928404142″,”isEmbeddedWidget”:true,”selectedImageIndex”:0,”isMobile”:false}) });

Sadly, to lighten the Eagle so it could take off again two of the mission’s Hasselblad bodies and lenses were left on the Moon along with about $ 1 million worth of other equipment. In all twelve Hasselblad cameras have been left on the Moon since 1969. It might be worth starting another mission to go and collect them all!

For more information see the Hasselblad In Space pages of the company’s website, or read the original press release online.

Press release:

HASSELBLAD CELEBRATES 50 YEARS ON THE MOON AS THE CAMERA THAT DOCUMENTED THE HISTORIC MOON LANDING

Shortly after the Lunar Module Eagle touched down at Tranquility Base, astronauts Aldrin and Armstrong aboard the Apollo 11 mission would don their bulky space suits and step carefully down onto the dusty ground, becoming the first visit by humankind to the lunar surface. Naturally, the tools chosen to record and document this momentous occasion represented the best technologies of the time – including the still camera of choice, a Hasselblad. That selection was the result of years of close collaboration between the Swedish camera manufacturer and the American space agency to ensure that its professional medium format cameras could stand the rigors of intense temperatures, vibration, and decreased gravity in space. Not only have these photographs provided scientific insight but have proven to be legendary marvels recognized the world over representing the human existence. Fifty years later, on 20 July 2019, Hasselblad proudly celebrates its role in being the cameras that were chosen by NASA for space photography, and even more so, the cameras that documented the historical moment of the first men on the Moon.

Hasselblad and NASA’s journey together began seven years previous to the Apollo 11 mission – in 1962 during the Mercury program. As a photography enthusiast, Naval Captain and Mission Pilot Walter “Wally” Schirra owned a Hasselblad 500C already. Knowing the high quality of the Hasselblad camera, Schirra suggested to NASA that they use a Hasselblad to document space since the previous camera model utilised delivered disappointing results. After buying a few 500Cs, a weight-loss program followed including removal of its leather covering, auxiliary shutter, reflex mirror, and viewfinder. A new film magazine was constructed in order to allow for 70 exposures instead of the usual 12. Finally, a matte black outer paint job minimized reflections in the window of the orbiter.

The streamlined Hasselblad would find itself in the payload for Mercury 8 (MA-8) in October 1962. The successful, high quality images that Schirra captured across his six orbits of the Earth would spark a new chapter in the history of Hasselblad and a long, close and mutually beneficial cooperation between the American space agency and the Swedish camera manufacturer.

Considered one of the most iconic moments is that of Apollo 11’s descent and exploration of the lunar sur- face. Taken down to the surface was a Hasselblad Data Camera (HDC) fitted with a Zeiss Biogon 60mm ƒ/5,6 lens and 70mm film magazine containing specially formulated thin-base Kodak film, allowing for 200 images per magazine. A second Hasselblad Electric Camera (HEC) with a Zeiss Planar 80mm ƒ/2,8 lens was used to shoot from inside the Eagle lunar module. Installed in the HDC was a Réseau plate, which optically imprinted fixed cross-marks allowing for photogrammetric measurements to be made from the resulting negative. The HDC was specifically designed to cope with the rigors of the lunar surface; it was painted silver as a way to stabilize the camera when moving between temperatures ranging from -65° C (-85° F) to over 120° C (248° F).

Armstrong carried out all the photography himself on the lunar surface with this HDC attached to his chest, which had never been tested in space before, adding to the pressure of this once in a lifetime moment. Would the one Hasselblad camera capture the results everyone was hoping for?

Working perfectly under the extreme conditions of the lunar surface, the HDC produced some of history’s most iconic photographs. After the successful shooting on 21 July 1969, the Hasselblad was hoisted up to the lunar lander with a line. After securely removing the film magazines, both cameras with lenses and ancillary support accessories, along with other collection tools, components, and waste were jettisoned in order to meet narrow weight margins for successful return. The succeeding five Apollo missions to land would repeat this practice, resulting in a total of 12 Hasselblad camera bodies with lenses still left on the Moon.

The collaboration would continue well into the 21st century with continually updated Hasselblad cameras being a vital part of manned spaceflight well into the Shuttle program. With each development handled jointly between NASA engineers and Hasselblad’s precision manufacturing team, the shared results would benefit the manufacturer too.

Features such as enlarged control surfaces designed for bulky space suit gloves would result in changes made in the design of Hasselblad’s professional camera systems, while later missions would be afforded the accurate internal metering system on later camera models.

Celebrating 50 years on the Moon, Hasselblad is proud to have been part of a significant chapter in both photographic and human history.

Stay tuned in July to see how we commemorate this momentous occasion.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Hasselblad re-issues 1969 press release on moon landing cameras

Posted in Uncategorized

 

1969 US Geological Survey photo of a massive lava ‘bubble’ goes viral

07 Apr
Photo by JB Judd/USGS

A photograph captured by US Geological Survey (USGS) photographer JB Judd in 1969 is ‘going viral’ online this week. The photo shows a massive, symmetrical lava dome fountain that was captured during a 5-year-long eruption of the Kilauea volcano’s Mauna Ulu cone between 1969 and 1974.

The so-called lava “bubble” measured approximately 65ft / 20m in height, and it owes its Internet fame to this “Throwback Thursday” tweet by the USGS:

After a bit of digging, the internet managed to unearth Judd’s original photograph of the lava bubble, which seems to have been flipped horizontally, straightened, and edited to produce the image shared on Twitter. The USGS photo page lists the estimated height of the bubble as 50 to 75 meters, or approximately 164 to 246 feet, and describes symmetrical dome fountains such as these as “rare.”

The image is one of many public domain photos in the USGS photo archive. To see more, head over to the USGS website where you can browse the full collection.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on 1969 US Geological Survey photo of a massive lava ‘bubble’ goes viral

Posted in Uncategorized

 

First Man on the Moon (RESTORED FOOTAGE) – Moon Walk 3D – Apollo 11, Neil Armstrong, July 20, 1969

23 Nov

July 20, 1969 Video of man’s (Neil Armstrong’s) first steps on the moon. This crude video was taken by a Slow Scan video camera attached to Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) and broadcast on live TV. For 3D: view anaglyph (Left lens=Red, Right lens=Blue).
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
Comments Off on First Man on the Moon (RESTORED FOOTAGE) – Moon Walk 3D – Apollo 11, Neil Armstrong, July 20, 1969

Posted in 3D Videos