Featured on PDR in the collection Photographs of (models of) the moon (1874)

At first glance these intricate depictions of the moon might seem like photographs from the Apollo space program of 1961–75. In fact they were captured a century earlier by an ingenious and wholly land-based Scottish astronomer. Peering through a self-made telescope, James Nasmyth sketched the moon’s scarred, cratered and mountainous surface. Aiming to “faithfully reproduce the lunar effects of light and shadow” he then built plaster models based on the drawings, and photographed these against black backgrounds in the full glare of the sun. As the technology for taking photographs directly through a telescope was still in its infancy, the drawing and modelling stages of the process were essential for attaining the moonly detail he wanted.

Group of Lunar Mountains

Artist

Date

1874

From

The Moon: Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

1024 x 847 Higher res available?

 Download Image