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Bathing/Grooming in the TOS-era

I will never forget a set of fan-made Star Trek cargo shuttle blueprints which suggested that bodily waste was beamed straight from the occupant and dispersed into space.
 
And coffee makers. Lots and lots of coffee.
They do seem to drink a lot of it.
It makes a bit more sense than the ENT version, since it'd actually go into the mouth
Why couldn't what Sato was using go into her mouth?
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qpry43.jpg

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I don't recall McCoy ever performing an operation with gloves.
McCoy was just a old fashion country doctor.
 
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This guy (McCoy) could cure kidney failure with a pill and internal head injuries with a device that looked like a spanner so hey, I'd trust him! :bolian:
JB
 
When Nancy was in Kirk's body, there a scene where (iirc) Kirk is buffing his nails. So (my assumption) Kirk already possessed a nail buffer and Nancy found it. Kirk does come across as someone who takes care of his personal appearance.

Janice Lester, actually. Not Nancy Crater.

I don't recall McCoy ever performing an operation with gloves.

Operating on Joe Tormolen, but that was "The Naked Time" - early on in the series. http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Surgical_gloves

As for Kirk's concealer, I imagine that if he hurt himself, had no time to get treated in sickbay and needed to speak with someone important on the viewscreen, he might send his yeoman for his makeup (or nip down to his quarters himself) Hide scars from enemy to hide signs of weakness, or from ally to spare them having to look at a fresh wound. Alternately, it probably contains an antiseptic agent too.

@Donny you might find this helpful: http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Template:Personal_care
 
I would suggest taking inspiration from literary science fiction of the 1950s and 1960s.

Unfortunately, it's been a while since I read any, so no specific examples come to mind right now. :shrug:

Edit: A quick and dirty Google search of this kind of thing led me to Heinlein's concept of the "fresher" unit. I'm not sure when he first described it, though.
I seem to recall some mention of it in connection with Farnham's Freehold.
 
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An important thing to consider is that the same forces that throw people and chairs around also work on toilets and sinks. Something like the Iota folding concept could visually address the problems of space poo.

https://www.treehugger.com/bathroom...toilet-gareth-humphreys-elliott-whiteley.html

As for the sink, we know what the faucet looks like from WNMHGB. We also know that faucet had no sink.

http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x03hd-alt/wherenomanhasgonebeforehdalt0818.jpg

So to remain true to what was seen, you need a sinkless sink. Here you go:

http://www.contemporist.com/this-new-kitchen-design-has-a-disappearing-sink-you-need-to-see/
 
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Well, Tormolen stabbed himself to death with a butter knife. A lot of things were working wonky that day.

That's no thing. I sliced open my thumb with a butter knife. Forty years later, I still have a subdermal scar I can feel. Enough force can put a piece of straw through a telephone pole. I don't think Tormolen accomplished an impossible feat.
 
As for the sink, we know what the faucet looks like from WNMHGB. We also know that faucet had no sink.

http://tos.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x03hd-alt/wherenomanhasgonebeforehdalt0818.jpg

So to remain true to what was seen, you need a sinkless sink. Here you go:

http://www.contemporist.com/this-new-kitchen-design-has-a-disappearing-sink-you-need-to-see/

Given how useful a tap & basin would be in Sickbay, I find this retractable sink design extremely convincing. Great find!
 
Dont forget the 3 shells.

Also, in FJs plans he also included a dental unit. Not so much a comment on daily care bur definitely a thought toward regular maintenance.
 
This thread reminded me of Swank, and this is what Google had for me:
5A28C429-B199-4C75-878B-13AF3F7FD4B2.jpeg
I’m no design maven, but the algorithms for “1960s bathroom” leaned more towards angles, unlike the roundness I associated with the Enterprise:
08B17FBB-5DA2-432C-8843-2F675522439B.jpeg
37D20075-41CF-4AB3-9D69-884D126E183C.jpeg
If this appeared on camera, it would have been the lithium bypass circuits they burned out saving Mudd’s skin
 
I’m no design maven, but the algorithms for “1960s bathroom” leaned more towards angles, unlike the roundness I associated with the Enterprise:
Matt Jefferies had a TON of angles in his TOS design work. Take a look at the transporter console, or the table in the briefing room, or those trapezoidal doors if you don't believe me.
 
That’s fair. The Bachelin/Guzman aesthetic found in the standing sets from the pilots—bridge, transporter room, Pike’s quarters, and the briefing lounge— is what I’m thinking.
 
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