• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Donny's Refit Enterprise Interiors (Version 2.0)

Hey Donny (and others) on a slightly unrelated note does the Anovos TWOK uniform have proper bellbottoms? On the Anovos site they look more straight legged but in the movies they super flare out at the bottom.
 
Hey Donny (and others) on a slightly unrelated note does the Anovos TWOK uniform have proper bellbottoms? On the Anovos site they look more straight legged but in the movies they super flare out at the bottom.
No, the Anovos pants do not flare properly. It’s a bummer.
 
I don’t think they’re bell bottoms, more like extremely long and bloused inside the ankle boots, akin to current uniform code with all branch BDU’s. I believe I’ve seen photos (Christie’s Auction) of heel straps down at the cuffs to hold them in. You couldn’t physically do that with bells.
 
You should be able to get a pretty accurate look if you tuck the trousers into the boots just right. Otherwise, if you have a talent for sewing, you can purchase uniform patterns here and tailor them to your liking.
 
I don’t think they’re bell bottoms, more like extremely long and bloused inside the ankle boots, akin to current uniform code with all branch BDU’s. I believe I’ve seen photos (Christie’s Auction) of heel straps down at the cuffs to hold them in. You couldn’t physically do that with bells.


They're technically true bellbottoms since they do have the cuff and strap at the bottom, but they do super flare out below the knee:

http://movies.trekcore.com/gallery/displayimage.php?album=255&pid=26130#top_display_media

(Unless this was some special variant made for Doohan in TSFS)
 
I wanted a quick project I could bust out over the weekend, so I chose to go ahead and model the TMP Tricorder, since I want to have a couple of them sitting around sickbay when I'm done.

My main reference was a pic of a screen-used hero prop, but I also added features that AFAIK were unique to the Roddenberry Prop Replica that came out several years ago, namely the drop-down door which holds data chips that I have yet to model.






I'll get the chips modeled tomorrow!
 
Last edited:
Apropos of nothing, I ran into this pic again today and was trying to make out all the names and in-jokes on it. This might be of use to you somewhere, even if you have seen it before. If nothing else, this confirms that the ship turbolift was used as the elevator here too.
tumblr_pnwjweUpWn1qmtfp8o1_1280.jpg
 
Are those metal terminal points on the numeric keypad? Seems like the prop designers really wanted to incorporate functionality into the Tricorder but lacked the budget to incorporate true "mesh" type buttons.
Yikes, and the TWOK communicator gets grief for being too clunky! ;)
 
I generally like TMP designs, but I don't care for the tricorders at all. They make no sense. There's no screen, just 14 lights, which can't possibly provide much information in a quickly readable format. And it's got that weird inconvenient T shape where the top unit is permanently at a right angle to the rest instead of being something you can fold flat.


Apropos of nothing, I ran into this pic again today and was trying to make out all the names and in-jokes on it. This might be of use to you somewhere, even if you have seen it before. If nothing else, this confirms that the ship turbolift was used as the elevator here too.

A closer look at the text on the sign: http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=9093
 
Based on the film credits:
  • J.R. Jennings = Joseph R. Jennings, production designer
  • M.C. Minor = Michael Minor, art director
  • L. Cole = Lee Cole, graphic designer
  • D. Gluck = Daniel Gluck, set designer
  • D. Maltese = Daniel Maltese, set designer
  • T. Grodnick = ??? (IMDb lists a Todd Grodnick who was working as a production assistant and video coordinator in the early '80s, but he doesn't have credited work in TWOK or any other ST production)
  • D. Gabrielle = ???
  • C. Graffeo = Charles Graffeo, set decorator
  • J. Longo = Joe Longo, property master
  • G. Rescher = Gayne Rescher, cinematographer
  • D. Arakelian = Deborah Arakelian, assistant to producers
 
Yikes, and the TWOK communicator gets grief for being too clunky!

In my head cannon the TWOK communicators are actually the model before the version seen in The Cage. They are using them because it's a cadet ship, so they get the old stuff.
 
I generally like TMP designs, but I don't care for the tricorders at all. They make no sense. There's no screen, just 14 lights, which can't possibly provide much information in a quickly readable format. And it's got that weird inconvenient T shape where the top unit is permanently at a right angle to the rest instead of being something you can fold flat.

Everyone using a tricorder in TMP seemed to be looking at that red square on the left side, which makes me think it's supposed to be the 'screen.' Maybe working with the brain implant Gene pulled out of his - uh, out of nowhere in the TMP novelization to overlay data HUD-display style over your normal vision, as you'd have serious eye strain trying to read something that small otherwise.

Then again, I suppose that square's not much smaller than the screen on the TNG tricorder, so what do I know.
 
Everyone using a tricorder in TMP seemed to be looking at that red square on the left side, which makes me think it's supposed to be the 'screen.'

Isn't it more likely that they're looking at the status lights just above and below that red square? Presumably it was supposed to work by the same principle as all the blinky lights on TOS computers (and older real-life computers before video monitors and user interfaces were developed), conveying information through the pattern of the status lights. The red square and green rectangles look more like touchpads.

Maybe working with the brain implant Gene pulled out of his - uh, out of nowhere in the TMP novelization

Presumably he got it from the same place he got most of his other concepts, by reading the prose science fiction of the era.

Besides, Roddenberry didn't design the tricorders himself. I doubt the people who did would've been drawing on the ideas he put in the novelization.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top