The lie is perfect. There is no wind. The only problem is getting the ball back.
The design
A single line traces the astronaut through the full arc of a golf swing: feet planted on the lunar surface, torso rotating into the backswing, both arms extended and the club raised at the top of the movement. The moon surface beneath the boots is suggested in the same stroke, just enough curvature to place the scene without cluttering it. The club shaft extends cleanly from the gloved hands, and the whole figure has the coiled, committed energy of a proper swing caught at its peak moment before release.
Golf swings are famously difficult to draw well. The rotation, the reach, the extension of both arms all have to read clearly at a glance. Single-line art handles this by committing to one fluid movement rather than trying to capture every technical detail, which turns out to be closer to how a good swing actually feels than any technical diagram would be.
Who it’s for
This is for the golfer. Not a specific kind of golfer, just anyone who plays, thinks about playing, or has opinions about courses, clubs, conditions, and the ongoing question of whether their backswing needs work. The moon setting is a natural fit because golf on the moon is a real thing that actually happened, which makes this more of a historical reference than pure fantasy.
It also works for the person who finds golf culture fascinating in the way that any culture built around intense precision and elaborate ritual is fascinating. The absolute seriousness applied to a game played outdoors in soft shoes has a specific appeal. The astronaut commits to all of that and simply raises the stakes by relocating to the moon.
People who remember or have looked up Alan Shepard’s two golf shots on the lunar surface during Apollo 14 will have an additional layer of appreciation for this design that others will not, which makes it a particularly good gift for the golfer who is also a space history person.
A gift they will use
Golfers spend a meaningful amount of time thinking about their game when they are not playing it. The mug fits naturally into that routine: morning coffee before the round, something to come back to after, something to look at while they watch tournament coverage on a Sunday afternoon.
It works as a gift for a golfer at any level, from the casual weekend player who uses a full set they bought secondhand to someone with a single-digit handicap who is very serious about all of this. See more in the astronaut mug collection.
Two sizes: 11oz and 15oz
The 11oz is the everyday standard. It fits under most single-serve machines and holds a full cup of coffee or tea.
The 15oz gives you more room, good for a bigger pour or anyone who treats their first coffee as a double. Same design, more mug.
Care
The mug is dishwasher safe and microwave safe. The line art goes on before the glazing, so it holds its edge through regular washing without fading, cracking, or peeling. You can run it daily and it stays sharp.
Color and finish
This design prints as black line art on a white ceramic mug, crisp and high-contrast against the white. The same art comes on a black mug and an accent mug if you want a different look.
FAQ
Will the print survive the dishwasher?
Yes. The line art is sealed under the glaze, so it holds up through repeated dishwasher cycles without wearing down.
Does the 11oz fit under a pod machine?
Yes. The 11oz fits under most Keurig and Nespresso machines. The taller 15oz may need the drip tray removed on some models.
Is this design a direct reference to the Apollo 14 golf shot?
The design is inspired by that idea. Alan Shepard hit two golf balls on the lunar surface during Apollo 14, so an astronaut swinging a club on the moon has a real historical anchor behind it. That context tends to make the design land differently and more specifically for people who know the story.
One line, one astronaut, no clutter. Embrace simplicity.












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