Last week, sitting on our terrace, I pointed my Canon 5D Mark IV with the Sigma 100–400mm toward something both familiar and almost impossible to truly grasp: the Moon.

What we see as a calm, steady presence has a violent origin. The leading theory suggests that around 4.5 billion years ago, a Mars-sized body—often called Theia—collided with the early Earth. The debris from that impact eventually coalesced into the Moon. A cosmic accident, shaping everything that followed.

And yet, most illustrations fail to capture its true scale and distance.

In books, the Moon is often shown close to Earth, almost within reach. In reality, it orbits at an average distance of about 384,400 kilometers. You could line up roughly 30 Earths between them. That space is vast—so vast that the Moon, despite its size, appears small in our sky.

And still, its influence is enormous.

It stabilizes Earth’s axial tilt, helping maintain a relatively stable climate. Its gravitational pull drives the tides, shaping coastal ecosystems and possibly even playing a role in the early development of life.

Captured at 400mm, this image brings it closer—compressing that immense distance into something we can hold in a frame.

A reminder that some of the most distant things are also the most essential.

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Looking up from the sunrise, my attention was pulled away by something unexpected… a jet streaking overhead. And just beyond that fleeting trace of human ingenuity, there it was — the other constant in our sky. The Moon.

Not just a distant object, but a part of our own story. Formed from a colossal impact billions of years ago, a piece of Earth itself cast outward and forever bound to us. Since then, it has shaped our planet in quiet but profound ways — stabilizing our axial tilt, driving the tides, and possibly even helping to create the conditions for life as we know it.

It’s strange to think that while we engineer machines to cross the skies, leaving temporary marks that fade within minutes, the Moon remains. Steady. Unmoving in its rhythm. A reminder of deep time compared to our brief presence.

Photographing it is always a balance. The Moon reflects intense sunlight, far brighter than the sky around it. To preserve its surface detail, I lowered my ISO to 250 and increased the shutter speed to 1/500, keeping the highlights from blowing out while still capturing the surrounding atmosphere — including that fleeting human signature crossing beneath it.

Two worlds in one frame. One ancient and enduring, the other momentary and evolving.

And somehow, both tell the story of us.

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