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Missing 32" Enterprise finally found...

EDIT: It's an illustrious crew in that pic, to be sure. But seeing Doug, Denise, and Mike in there just brought a tear to my eye.

(and is an exact match to the Pilot gray hull color on the 11-footer).
Oh joy!

The hangar bay doors went missing in the late 60's, and they're still missing.
Ha!

Needless to say, the warp nacelles will need realigning.
Understatement of 2024!

As interesting factoid: the nacelle domes were orange and translucent, confirming that we had correctly restored the missing domes on the 11-footer in 2016. Whew!
Hee hee hee! And awesome!

All the intercoolers but one were missing, and the surviving intercooler was installed backwards! The backwards intercooler matches the one in what was in probably the last set of photos that were taken before the model vanished.
Well. Are THESE backwards? Or are the 11 footers backwards?

Oh dear Bird! YOU GO!
 
So glad to see all the updates and news blurbs have a happy end to this long story. She's back where she belongs after all this time. Glad to hear she's going to get a restoration and then be displayed to the public. I've seen the 11 footer may times, would love to see this one too.
 
So glad to see all the updates and news blurbs have a happy end to this long story. She's back where she belongs after all this time. Glad to hear she's going to get a restoration and then be displayed to the public. I've seen the 11 footer may times, would love to see this one too.
I want to see the 11' one day. It's cool seeing it on video but I want to see it in person before my death....
 
Shortly after took this picture:

View attachment 39333
Everyone cleared the table, and I Used my iPhone 15 to capture it from all angles in about 5 minutes, then turned those into a Gaussian Splat (3D point cloud with reflections) which is what you see in the video above.

Rod and I wanted to get this moment documented in 3D as best we could on that verification day, but we will do a proper full LightStage scan of the model as we did with other physical props for the Roddenberry Archive:

View attachment 39332

This is so great. Made my day....:beer:
 
Oh, I think you can look at how it was treated before Ed got to it. He might have been wrong but at least he cared.

The 1701 photos posted here--
dDpcPlW.jpg

6RcJuIz.jpg



--are courtesy of Greg Holmes, who photographed the Enterprise in 1981, when it was still in the slightly restored shape it had been as part of the Smithsonian's "Life in the Universe" exhibit in the 70s (I visited the exhibit at the time to see the miniature up close). At that stage, it was undoubtedly closer to its production shape than Ed Miarecki's wrongheaded hack-work, which bore no resemblance to TOS filmed footage, behind the scenes bluescreen work or publicity photos.
 
The 1701 photos posted here--
dDpcPlW.jpg

6RcJuIz.jpg



--are courtesy of Greg Holmes, who photographed the Enterprise in 1981, when it was still in the slightly restored shape it had been as part of the Smithsonian's "Life in the Universe" exhibit in the 70s (I visited the exhibit at the time to see the miniature up close). At that stage, it was undoubtedly closer to its production shape than Ed Miarecki's wrongheaded hack-work, which bore no resemblance to TOS filmed footage, behind the scenes bluescreen work or publicity photos.
It was closer just because it hadn't been touched. Any place where it was touched? The nacelle domes and the primary sensor dish were far more wildly wrong than Miarecki. Because, hey, who cares, right?

Miarecki was wrong, but I can at least see how he got there.
 
It was closer just because it hadn't been touched. Any place where it was touched? The nacelle domes and the primary sensor dish were far more wildly wrong than Miarecki. Because, hey, who cares, right?

The original dish had been lost, along with the nacelle domes, so they needed to be replaced. Other changes occurred during the 1974 restoration (so it had been "touched"), but viewing it up close in the 70s, I could see the majority of what had been in front of cameras, instead of Miarecki's disastrous paint and pencil scribbling making the miniature appear like something completely different that the construction used on TOS.
 
I hope we get a model kit or a high quality toy out of this.....:D

I would welcome a scan of the 32 inch for purposes of a model, since every "3-foot" 1701 released this century, including the poorly constructed Unobtanium version, Polar Lights' various kits and Tomy's diecast were all referring to their work as a "studio scale" version, but based on the 11-footer's design.
 
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we will do a proper full LightStage scan of the model as we did with other physical props for the Roddenberry Archive

Hopefully X-Rays and maybe an MRI to boot, to show the previously flat lower saucer now covered in bondo or whatever.

Actors are de-aged now…maybe it could be “de-warped.”

Having a scan of the 3-footer as is…presented in the same angle as period photographs of the time—perhaps you could “morph” your scan to fit the outline of earlier pictures and thereby have a “virtual restoration” at the very least.

X-Rays/MRI to show any hidden damage, to identify wood grain, etc.

A virtual restoration might be all that can be done, without it all splintering.

Aging occurs differently:

Tomes, parchment in the Vatican Library is pretty tough to this day—but pulps a century or less old? Disintegrating…

Perhaps Shaw’s next to it to represent it whole:
http://www.shawcomputing.net/racerx/trek_stuff/site_demo/timeline.html

I would be afraid to be in the same room as it.
I’d sneeze—and it’d explode. No horseplay!
 
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