Any idea about the images on the Ilia Probe scan, @Rick Sternbach?Yeah, I got nuthin'.My actual published artwork didn't show up in Trek until TNG. - Rick
EDIT: Disregard. I found the answer below.
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Any idea about the images on the Ilia Probe scan, @Rick Sternbach?Yeah, I got nuthin'.My actual published artwork didn't show up in Trek until TNG. - Rick
One of the trading cards had the skeletal image, one of the Milton Bradley jigsaw puzzles of the time had the image of the unscanned Ilia up on the screen. (Only pics of the latter I can find are on either eBay or Etsy, so I can't show them here.) They wouldn't have ginned that up just for a publicity photo, esp. at a point when none of the finished fx were ready (another of those puzzles has the not-quite-finished Enterprise composited against a nebula), so it had to have been done on the set.
Whatever those compartments are they must have been some stock element because I've seen them in other movies and shows, as I think we discussed at some point here.Man, I'm in love with being able to work on my personal projects on my lunch breaks
Got the greeble below what I've decided are storage cubicles done today. Instead of modeling all those circular holes, I've employed displacement maps (which are much quicker and cheaper to generate) to give the illusion of modeled depth.
If I do end up envisioning a pharmacy/medicine storage area, I'll probably have rows of these storage units in a room. I feel that there's a unit in each examination room for easy access of commonly used medicines, but the back-stock of medicines would be elsewhere.
Wow, the set has a real 2001 vibe in this state.
I was thinking that myself.Wow, the set has a real 2001 vibe in this state.
Or put Frank Poole on a med bed...wait, already done that.You should stick a monolith or a Star Child on one of the monitors.![]()
That's quite a bird. Not a Great Bird, of course.BTW, a little bird told me he thinks the graphics of the Ilia Probe scan came out the art department, possibly starting from real medical imagery, and possibly the work of Lee Cole, and that I ought to check her Starlog interview and maybe Return to Tomorrow.
Well, it wasn't Sternbach who pointed that out.That's quite a bird. Not a Great Bird, of course.
That almost looks like a prototype for the wrist communicator Capt. Terrell used in TWOK.Someone sent me this a while back, claiming it was a prototype wrist communicator. I can't speak to the authenticity of it.
View attachment 14490
Someone sent me this a while back, claiming it was a prototype wrist communicator. I can't speak to the authenticity of it.
View attachment 14490
Well, chalk up another great feat by Lee Cole! Thanks for the finding, @Maurice!Well, it wasn't Sternbach who pointed that out.
Anyway, here's the answer about the medical images of Ilia.
[Lee Cole] “There were times when we had to work half the night and Saturday and Sunday, too. One of my favorite pieces of work in the film was the medical scanning effect that flashes on the large, screen when McCoy scans Ilia and discovers that she is a robot. We had to get that one done in one weekend. Mike Minor and I did that on a Sunday afternoon. The room wasn’t air conditioned and it felt like it was 200 degrees. I brought in a big pile of x-rays and he started working on the x-ray effects from that. I couldn’t actually get thermograms to work from so I had to fake it. I did a painting of an infra-red scan of her body and we added other scans on top of it to futurize it. The finished effect is a super-scan: a number of scans done simultaneously. One band shows a thermogram, the other shows her blinking and winking circuitry. That work took us through to Monday night.”
"Designing the 23rd Century", Ed Naha, FUTURE LIFE #17. March 1980, p.81.
Links ^^^
There are a few pix in the article.
View attachment 14488
Can you point out the source?From the owner: "It’s a piece that was made for Phase II, my earliest encounter was in the mid 90’s at conventions on display with other original props. It came up for sale almost 10years ago and I acquired it."
In terms of the Ilia stuff, I did the static silkscreen art for the yellow-green bed she was on, and that was about it. I did do the ink art for the regular bed monitors, which actually lasted up through early TNG.Any idea about the images on the Ilia Probe scan, @Rick Sternbach?
EDIT: Disregard. I found the answer below.
Do you remember (roughly) when those bed monitors changed? I thought they were the same graphics (though maybe with different colored gels) all the way from TMP through Generations.I did do the ink art for the regular bed monitors, which actually lasted up through early TNG.- Rick
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