While picking over the bone of something else to do with Apollo 15, I came across the photographs and TV taken during the lunar eclipse.
This intrigued me a little so I did some more searching and came across this:
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/apollo/apollo15/html/s71-58222.htmlWhich as it says are images taken by the Nikon camera (referred to in the transcripts) during the eclipse. The blurb there mentions the starfield and even a cursory examination reveals that there are several identical features, and that means that we aren't looking at blemishes but actual objects.
So I set to work in Stellarium to find them with no luck. I then resorted to Astrometry.net's website and submitted versions of the images with and without the moon in the middle, all of which returned a site a long way from where the moon should be, so I assumed they were incorrectly interpolated. I then did a manual overlay or white dots on over the brightest stars and resubmitted it (so you get a pure black and white image with no noise). Same result.
I then overlaid the result in Stellarium and it does seem that Astrometry has it correct (see below):
However, while the starfield seems to be focused on the constellation of Aquarius, the moon itself in the Earth's shadow is over in Capricorn (just below the 'pr' in the gif).
Does anyone have any more information about the images. Are they actually of the eclipse? Or even the moon?! If you follow the path of the moon it does not pass where the photo puts it!
(edited to correct web address)