Piece of Apollo 11 spacecraft ‘lands’ in moon meteorite-lined wedding ring

For better or for worse, a small part of the Apollo 11 spacecraft will now be Jon Mesick’s to have and to hold for all the days of his life.

The strip of golden thermal polyimide tape, which made the trip to the moon with the first astronauts to land there in 1969, is now the centerpiece of Mesick’s custom wedding band made by the Honest Hands Rings Company of Morrison, Colorado. The ring, which also incorporates lunar meteorite, is the focus of a newly posted online video that highlights the ring’s significance and shows how it was made.

“We’ve made thousands of rings before, but never with anything this rare,” said Ben Bosworth, Honest Hands Ring Co. owner. “That was the most stressful ring that we’ve ever done.”

We put Apollo 11 into a WEDDING RING! – YouTube
We put Apollo 11 into a WEDDING RING! - YouTube


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Mesick’s desire to have a piece of the Apollo 11 mission integrated into his ring stemmed, in part, from his work as a planning manager for Lockheed Martin. The aerospace company is one of the prime contractors for NASA’s Artemis program, providing Orion, the spacecraft currently planned to return the first astronauts to the moon in more than 50 years.

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