Before Neil Armstrong Set Foot on the Moon, Buzz Aldrin was trying to get the best photograph

  • Aldrin: You've got a good picture, huh?
  • Houston: There's a great deal of contrast in it, and currently, it's upside-down on our monitor, but we can make out a fair amount of detail.
  • Aldrin: Will you verify the position - the opening I ought to have on the camera?
  • Houston: Stand by.
  • [Armstrong begins to descend.]
  • Houston: We can see you coming down the ladder now.
  • Armstrong: Okay, I just checked getting back up to that first step, Buzz. It's -- not even collapsed too far, but it's adequate to get back up... It takes a pretty good little jump.
  • Houston: Buzz, this is Houston. F/2 - 1/160th second for shadow photography on the sequence camera.
  • Aldrin: Okay.
  • Armstrong: I'm at the foot of the ladder. The [Lunar Module] footpads are only depressed in the surface about 1 or 2 inches, although the surface appears to be very fine grained as you get close to it. It's almost like a powder. Down there, it's very fine. I'm going to step off the [Lunar Module] now. THAT'S ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND.

My new Instagram photography book

Using some of my favorite Instagram photos over the last year, I decided to make a photo compilation book I could share IRL. Of course I’ll continue sharing these same photos on this photoblog, and here is a preview of how the book appears:

Speaking in Megapixels by Matthew Hurst | Make Your Own Book

When I toured Europe and Australia as a student ambassador I enrolled in a college-credit photojournalism course.  About halfway through my 3 week trip the camera broke, so I bought disposable camera.  When I came home I printed the photos, assembled my portfolio, and sent in my submission.  I still earned my college credits…
via youarenotaphotog:

The camera doesn’t matter. 

When I toured Europe and Australia as a student ambassador I enrolled in a college-credit photojournalism course.  About halfway through my 3 week trip the camera broke, so I bought disposable camera.  When I came home I printed the photos, assembled my portfolio, and sent in my submission.  I still earned my college credits…

via youarenotaphotog:

The camera doesn’t matter. 

(via youarenotaphotog)

Advice for Aspiring Photographers

via youarenotaphotog:

We know a lot of new photographers read this site. We want this to be a place to laugh, cringe and learn at the same time.

(via youarenotaphotog)

Photography is not art goddamnet! It’s just a Xerox of what just happened.
– (via clientsfromhell)

How to be a “professional” photographer in 2010:

jeremyxposi:

Buy DSLR camera from Walmart, take ridiculously close up photos of EVERYTHING, make a flickr/crappy pre-made website, post photos, give everyone a business card that you got for free off of vistaprint.com, and charge either way too little or way too much money for “portraits.”

Before Neil Armstrong Set Foot on the Moon, Buzz Aldrin was trying to get the best photograph

  • Aldrin: You've got a good picture, huh?
  • Houston: There's a great deal of contrast in it, and currently, it's upside-down on our monitor, but we can make out a fair amount of detail.
  • Aldrin: Will you verify the position - the opening I ought to have on the camera?
  • Houston: Stand by.
  • [Armstrong begins to descend.]
  • Houston: We can see you coming down the ladder now.
  • Armstrong: Okay, I just checked getting back up to that first step, Buzz. It's -- not even collapsed too far, but it's adequate to get back up... It takes a pretty good little jump.
  • Houston: Buzz, this is Houston. F/2 - 1/160th second for shadow photography on the sequence camera.
  • Aldrin: Okay.
  • Armstrong: I'm at the foot of the ladder. The [Lunar Module] footpads are only depressed in the surface about 1 or 2 inches, although the surface appears to be very fine grained as you get close to it. It's almost like a powder. Down there, it's very fine. I'm going to step off the [Lunar Module] now. THAT'S ONE SMALL STEP FOR MAN, ONE GIANT LEAP FOR MANKIND.

My new Instagram photography book

Using some of my favorite Instagram photos over the last year, I decided to make a photo compilation book I could share IRL. Of course I’ll continue sharing these same photos on this photoblog, and here is a preview of how the book appears:

Speaking in Megapixels by Matthew Hurst | Make Your Own Book

When I toured Europe and Australia as a student ambassador I enrolled in a college-credit photojournalism course.  About halfway through my 3 week trip the camera broke, so I bought disposable camera.  When I came home I printed the photos, assembled my portfolio, and sent in my submission.  I still earned my college credits…
via youarenotaphotog:

The camera doesn’t matter. 

When I toured Europe and Australia as a student ambassador I enrolled in a college-credit photojournalism course.  About halfway through my 3 week trip the camera broke, so I bought disposable camera.  When I came home I printed the photos, assembled my portfolio, and sent in my submission.  I still earned my college credits…

via youarenotaphotog:

The camera doesn’t matter. 

(via youarenotaphotog)

Advice for Aspiring Photographers

via youarenotaphotog:

We know a lot of new photographers read this site. We want this to be a place to laugh, cringe and learn at the same time.

(via youarenotaphotog)

Photography is not art goddamnet! It’s just a Xerox of what just happened.
– (via clientsfromhell)

How to be a “professional” photographer in 2010:

jeremyxposi:

Buy DSLR camera from Walmart, take ridiculously close up photos of EVERYTHING, make a flickr/crappy pre-made website, post photos, give everyone a business card that you got for free off of vistaprint.com, and charge either way too little or way too much money for “portraits.”

Before Neil Armstrong Set Foot on the Moon, Buzz Aldrin was trying to get the best photograph
My new Instagram photography book
"Photography is not art goddamnet! It’s just a Xerox of what just happened."
How to be a “professional” photographer in 2010:

About:

Life at a skewed perspective, and spoken through different mediums (but mostly a cameraphone).

Learn more about the photographer at MatthewHurst.com. Or look through the skewed vision of my photostream on Flickr

Looking for @MattHurst on Tumblr?

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