The Dog of War issue 1 is very good!
Would Sisko have attended the Academy that far back that he'd be wearing a monster maroon? Memory Alpha says he was born in 2332 (they cite three episodes to back that claim up). Assuming he was 18 when he joined the Academy, that would be 2350. MA also states Starfleet switched from the monster maroons to the early TNG jumpsuits in 2350. Which admittedly could be speculation on their part, but reasonable speculation. The latest we saw a monster maroon was 2348 in the hologram message Jack Crusher left for Wesley, as seen in TNG Family. While we know they switched to the early TNG jumpsuits by 2353, as we see Picard wearing one when he's informing Beverly Crusher of Jack's death in TNG Violations.
At the very least, even if we entertain Starfleet might have still been using the monster maroons in 2350, then they should be using the TNG badge, as that's what Jack had on in Family. So Sisko wearing the TOS movie era badge in that picture is definitely an error.
IIRC, the original intent with TWOK was that cadets did wear an officers uniform, but with red for their department color on their undershirt and shoulder epaulet, as indicated with Saavik's uniform in that movie, with the jumpsuits just for enlisted. Indeed, the divide we see with black collars and red collars was meant to represent whether one was still in training (they wore red collars) or if they were qualified personnel (black collar). Yes, over the years this got ignored/forgotten to the point we ended up with Cadet Picard wearing a jumpsuit in Nemesis.Even if he was still a cadet in the monster maroon era, he probably should have worn the cadet/enlisted jumpsuit instead of the officers' uniform.
Honestly, I think I picked that term up around here and by now it's just stuck with me.Incidentally, where did the term "monster maroon" come from for the TWOK uniforms?
Incidentally, where did the term "monster maroon" come from for the TWOK uniforms?
Honestly, I think I picked that term up around here and by now it's just stuck with me.
Maybe Sisko got dressed up for his graduation photo, so it's mostly ceremonial.
Getting even further afield, the opening cutscene for the Starfleet Academy video game suggests the officer uniforms were used as dress uniforms by cadets, wearing proper division colors but no rank insignia or badges.
This is the kind of question I live for.Incidentally, where did the term "monster maroon" come from for the TWOK uniforms?
This is the kind of question I live for.
I'm sure they are heavy and uncomfortable; I don't see how they couldn't be. And nicknaming them after how they feel to wear seems pretty likely in a costumer-focused community.Thanks for the research. Although even if that explains where it came from, I'm still puzzled by the why. Why "monster?" I mean, I'm no fan of the TWOK uniforms, which are too retro and militaristic and look like they should only be dress uniforms instead of everyday duty wear (which should've been just the underlying turtleneck with an insignia pin), but "monster" seems excessive even to me. Could it be that they're called that because they're heavy and uncomfortable to wear? Although I don't know if they are.
The most common reason I've seen for the "monster" appellation was due to the level of effort required to duplicate them accurately. That doesn't mean it's true of course, just a sentiment I've seen multiple times.
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