@Lora4October, just popped in to say I love your work. I still have my dog-eared "Starfleet Uniform Recognition Manual" somewhere. I must've poured over that a million times.
Thank you...that book was an early one

Lora
@Lora4October, just popped in to say I love your work. I still have my dog-eared "Starfleet Uniform Recognition Manual" somewhere. I must've poured over that a million times.
Lora,
I just found this thread, and I have to echo those who have come before in my fondness (as well as frequent reading!) of Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise! It's a book that I will look through often, just like the Franz Joseph Technical Manual.
On another note, I followed your link to some other non-Trek work you have done. The Alamo, being a place I've never been and always want to visit, makes me feel like I'm looking at actual photos! Beautiful work!
Thank you for sharing those on here, and being accessible to speak with everyone!
BTW, although I didn't follow it completely, I also learned forms of drawing from my father, who was also an architect.
Wait - there were to be fold-out DECK PLANS? Now I feel really cheated!
You don't happen to have any extracts from there that you'd be willing to share, by any chance do you?![]()
No, those items were cut very early on and never produced. The deck plans, however, were updated and completed (with the help of David Ziels, Tim Palgut and David Schmidt) and I'd love to find a way to get them published
Lora
Lora, I've got it on pretty good authority that Trek 'tech books' are on the way in again at Paramount. (There's a new manual coming out next month, for instance.) You could contact them again and do a little fishing. At the VERY worst you could get an official release for your own work to publish as you desire.
Lora, welcome! I'm a little late to the party, but a question, please?
At the end of the guide, it says that 1701-A was renamed thusly from the USS Ti-Ho. Had you meant a fictional Ti-Ho, or had you meant Taiho, which I believe was a Japanese warship from World War 2 era?
And there was also fan speculation that 1701-A was a renamed USS Yorktown as well. I was curious as to your take on that.
The Ti-Ho was a Federation starship designed by a dear friend of mine in the 1970s. Angular and streamlined, it varied somewhat from the few ships we had seen in Star Trek to that point. I named the 1701-A's origin ship after it as a tribute to my friend, who had died in an auto accident a few years earlier. The entire book was dedicated to him, as well.
He collected waterline models of WWII ships, and I believe the name was indeed derived from the Japanese aircraft carrier.
At the time of Mr. Scott's Guide's writing, no name had yet been determined for the source vessel, leaving one of many gaps I had to fill in creating a fluid narrative. For several years following the book's publication date, Ti-Ho was 'official.' The Yorktown nomenclature came later.
So, it may no longer be considered canon by a lot of people, but for me the ship began as the Ti-Ho and I will always think of her that way.
Lora
That was awesome to listen to, looking forward to part 2! My appreciation for MSGttE grows knowing what a struggle it was to get done on time!
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