The first of one thousand, I hope! Thanks for the coolness of your work.This is my first post here.
I reach.
WELCOME!!! I look forward to seeing LOTS more from you!

The first of one thousand, I hope! Thanks for the coolness of your work.This is my first post here.
I reach.
OMG! I want to smack my fellow yungins for things like that. I love movies like Casablanca, Citizen Kane, even back into the Charlie Chaplin/Buster Keaton days. Hell, one of my personal top ten movies of all time was Nosferatu. No offense, but even TOS is an echo of what came before. Once they had talkies, thing would never be the same.Many Millenium Geners would consider peeps that could view TV shows in the 70's as old-timers!And for those who are not-so-old-timers: who cares as long as you share an appreciation for the place where it all began (TOS). I didn't start watching until the seventies, either...![]()
Of course, that's after they get over the shock of learning that there was TV in the seventies - and in colour!
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The Same..Where in the UK? RAF Bentwaters/RAF Woodbridge here.
Yoyman, Warped 9, Procutus, Chrisisall, Orcus and the rest of you TOS LOVERS,
Thanks for your kind words. Yes it is true the original Star Trek has a quality about it that seem missing in most of the others that followed. I’d say that quality had something to do with the fact that it appealed to the younger folk in North America (Europe and other countries) at a time when amazing things where happening in the real world of space exploration. I am of course talking about the NASA space program and in particular the successful attempt to put a man on the moon. Star Trek gave us youngsters at the time an even wider imaginative perspective than just the moon. That is what I still sense each time I watch one of the old episodes. You got to love it!
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No my friend, my words were not kind enough!Thanks for your kind words.
Oh."Rendering"? It's a photo of the MR model.
My Son owns both series on DVD- Trek is his go-to one though.I still enjoy Lost in Space, but from a different aspect than I did 44 years ago.
That work of art you posted is one of the single best renderings of the Enterprise ever. If not THE best.[/QUOTE said:Chrisisall,
Much appreciated, thanks!
I gotta ask if you do this for a living!:techman:[/QUOTE said:These photographs of my MR Enterprise Model are done strictly for my own pleasure. I work as a portrait artist and private art teacher by day, but at night when the stars come out –chuckle, I do like my Star Trek! For a few years now I have also experimented with Photoshop, which is where I learned to create star fields, and a great deal more. Among the many things I like besides the TOS Enterprise is the artistry in studio lighting and colour for that show. Some have suggested it looks unreal but I think it gave the show an off world look, kind of fitting don’t you think.
Just too freaking cool!Yoyman, Warped 9, Procutus, Chrisisall, Orcus and the rest of you TOS LOVERS,
Thanks for your kind words. Yes it is true the original Star Trek has a quality about it that seem missing in most of the others that followed. I’d say that quality had something to do with the fact that it appealed to the younger folk in North America (Europe and other countries) at a time when amazing things where happening in the real world of space exploration. I am of course talking about the NASA space program and in particular the successful attempt to put a man on the moon. Star Trek gave us youngsters at the time an even wider imaginative perspective than just the moon. That is what I still sense each time I watch one of the old episodes. You got to love it!
![]()
I knew it. You can't just hold up a model, no matter how beautiful, and take a picture of it & get it to look that way. The lighting MATTERS!!! And integrating it into an artificial background can be tricky. You succeeded on every level with that, Art!I work as a portrait artist
Yoyman, Warped 9, Procutus, Chrisisall, Orcus and the rest of you TOS LOVERS,
Thanks for your kind words. Yes it is true the original Star Trek has a quality about it that seem missing in most of the others that followed. I’d say that quality had something to do with the fact that it appealed to the younger folk in North America (Europe and other countries) at a time when amazing things where happening in the real world of space exploration. I am of course talking about the NASA space program and in particular the successful attempt to put a man on the moon. Star Trek gave us youngsters at the time an even wider imaginative perspective than just the moon. That is what I still sense each time I watch one of the old episodes. You got to love it!
![]()
Artman my friend, I've liked all of your pictures so far, but this one is my favorite (so far). I'm planning to use it as my desktop wallpaper.
OMG! I want to smack my fellow yungins for things like that. I love movies like Casablanca, Citizen Kane, even back into the Charlie Chaplin/Buster Keaton days. Hell, one of my personal top ten movies of all time was Nosferatu. No offense, but even TOS is an echo of what came before. Once they had talkies, thing would never be the same.Many Millenium Geners would consider peeps that could view TV shows in the 70's as old-timers!![]()
Of course, that's after they get over the shock of learning that there was TV in the seventies - and in colour!
![]()
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