^Thank you, I forgot about that scene.
You will see it in the near futureDid they ever show the E-E's Ten Forward lounge, I can't recall. I'd love to see it.
http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415146270067/15415146618489There was also the ballroom set in Insurrection, but was that a redress of the FC conference lounge?
I'll get around to creating this banquet hall eventually, but for the E's Ten Forward, I have something more grand and original in mind.
You will see it in the near future
http://archive.frogland.co.uk/#15415146270067/15415146618489
^The above schematic shows the configuration of the banquet hall, which was indeed a redress of the observation lounge. The set was move away from the bridge by several feet, and expanded on the sides with changes to the overhead support beams, and an addition to the side support beams like those on the bridge. The port side tied into a small section of corridor, while the starboard side had a private communications alcove.
I'll get around to creating this banquet hall eventually, but for the E's Ten Forward, I have something more grand and original in mind.
Same hereLooking forward to seeing it!
I'll get around to creating this banquet hall eventually, but for the E's Ten Forward, I have something more grand and original in mind.
IIRC, Rick Sternbach's Enterprise-D blueprints show smaller lounges scattered around the ship (usually near clusters of living quarters); this would be consistent with those, but it's definitely a disappointment compared to Ten Forward or whatever we might imagine a similar space on the E-E to look like. (Kind of like how the E-E's Stellar Cartography room lacked the wow factor of the one we saw in Generations, or even the interesting layout of the Astrometrics Lab on VOY.)That crew lounge looked tiny, as if it would be more at home on the NX-01!
I'd forgotten Riker named it that in the novels.When the novels first started calling it “the Happy Bottom Riding Club,”...
@ashefivekay is correct and I appreciate her faith in meI'm guessing here, but if Donny put it that way, that's how they were on set.
Damn but that's some fine attention to detail on those cards!Spent the last day and a half generating the isolinear cards seen in the film. Here's a array of difference colors and the three different card holders we saw in the films. Translucency is always a pain to deal with in real-time, so a lot of tweaking to get everything just right. Note: this isn't an Unreal render, as Unreal's translucency isn't as good as in Marmoset, the tool I use to render out showcase images of props. They don't look as good in Unreal, but they're good enough for set dressing as long as you don't get too close.
Marmoset Render:
Unreal (notice, not as good looking, even with ray-tracing translucency turned on):
These are the versions of the cards with rounded corners seen in Picard's ready room. I noticed that the chips/cards in scenes around the engine room, had square edges and the "header" graphic of each card was screen printed white/black instead of just silver. I did generate those cards for the day I do the engineering scenes, but they're not featured in the render above.
I'm not sure it was a mistake. I figured it was a stylistic choice. But if it was indeed a mistake, the text was never seen clearly on-screen so probably wasn't worth fussing over to get it changed.Interesting bit of trivia about the 1701-E vs 1701E too, I wonder why it was never caught on set?
@ashefivekay is correct and I appreciate her faith in me. But I also appreciate you looking out, @Flux Capacitor! It is indeed 1701E on the prop, without the hyphen.
http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/image.pl?76bda76a524d1e969d27e1c0b27aaee6
There are no close-ups of the chip holder prop to the left that I know of, but I assume what was written on it was the same as the middle holder.
Assuming that the stand was laser-engraved by a third party, it's a simple enough mistake to make and not one worth correcting given the size of the prop.I'm not sure it was a mistake. I figured it was a stylistic choice. But if it was indeed a mistake, the text was never seen clearly on-screen so probably wasn't worth fussing over to get it changed.
What do we think? Should I correct it and add a hyphen?
Sorry, I side on the contrary positionInteresting, I never knew that! As someone who proofreads a print publication as part of my job, my gut is telling me it was a mistake since there's no real reason to *not* include the hyphen. So I would vote to correct it.
Sorry, I side on the contrary position
I like it as a "real world" Easter Egg![]()
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