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Rare Star Trek Photos

Botany Bay

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Hey guys. I found this lot in Starlog #1 from 1976, when they did a full TOS episode guide and tribute to celebrate their first issue.

Personally I'd never seen any of these pics before. Enjoy.

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I'm one of the old guys who has Starlog No. 1 on his shelf. The cover painting is fantastic. This is a web image; my own copy is in much better condition:

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Starlog. In the ancient times that was our internet.

Very true.

Information was few and far between. I suppose that's why I loved franz Joseph and the technical manual and the blueprints. Now there are endless arguments over it, but back in the old days... That was all we had.
 
I had a decent collection of Starlogs from the early and mid 80's, unfortunately they didn't survive the three times that I've moved since then.
 
I never had the first three issues but started with #4 and The Outer Limits ep guide, but these days I only have a few of them still left! The early ones of course!
JB
 
This has been posted before, however on the Internet Archive here it's possible to find the collection of the first 265 issues of Starlog (I downloaded them all).

I wish they had also the photoguide books.

Maab
 
I remember purchasing issue 1 of Starlog like it was yesterday. Our town was holding a Bicentennial Parade and while waiting for the parade to start I walked into an open Bodega to look at some comic books. Sitting on the bottom shelf was the first issue of Starlog.

Being 13 years old at the time, I was the perfect age for this kind of magazine. I was a bit too old for Famous Monsters but not old enough for the more serious magazines like Cinefantastique (which I couldn't find on the news stand). I purchased issue 1 of Starlog as quickly as possible and reread it hundreds of times until issue 2 came out.

If I remember correctly, Starlog was initially published b-monthly though it quickly became a monthly magazine. The first 20 issues were hugely influential to me (as were the spin-off magazines like Future Life, Fangoria and Cinemagic) and sparked my imagination for many years afterwards. Those magazines were the "internet" for us fans in order to get our latest fix of Sci-Fi news.
 
A friend gave me the premiered issue as a gift, and I started purchasing them with issue 6, the cover art being a shot from "destination Moon". (I eventually "back ordered issues 2 through 5.) I distinctly remember the first price hike because I arrived at "The Smoke Stand" (a newsstand/bookstore/tobacco shop) with the "exact change" only to discover it was no longer enough.

Probably the coolest issue to me was number 10 containing an article titled "Roll Your Own". Despite the seeming reference to Cigarettes, the article was really about creating your own opitcal effects using 8 millimeter home movie cameras. (This was 1978, '79, years before digital video or even affordable videotape recording.) To illustrate the various examples, StarLog used the "Leif Ericson Interplanetary Cruiser" kit, along with the Lindberg Lunar Lander and space station models, probably because they were out production and were not owned by a major studio to whom the magazine would have probably needed to pay usage fees.

That article inspired by childhood friend (who had given me the first issue) to start creating his own effects. Though he didn't land that dream job at LucasFilms as many of us probably fanatsized, he did eventually become chief editor at a Birmingham based television station where he won a couple of technical Emmy awards.

Sincerely,

Bill
 
Hi Redfern,

Yes, issue 10 is one of the early classics! It had the Roll Your Own effects article you mentioned, separate interviews with Ray Harryhausen and George Pal, a cool preview of Space Academy and an article from Isaac Asimov. Perfect!
 
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