24 / 21 = 1.1429 times larger.
Hmm...
1.1429 x 947 = 1082
aaahhh crap.
1082Refresh my memory, please. This is a 1080 foot Enterprise, right?
It’s both! There is an animated “pulsing” that’s meant to evoke a sense of vast energies being transferred, and the grating itself causes some moire effects.Those shots where it passes over the gratings on the nacelle pylons, it kind of looks like there's some sort of energy moving through the conduits. Did you actually animate it that way, or is this the moire pattern of the grating playing tricks on me?
It is now. There’s just no way to fit a reasonably-sized hangar deck back there if the Enterprise is only 947 feet long. Remember how ridiculously yuuuuge the shuttles looked in the shuttle bay in TOS-R? I’m now convinced that it wasn’t because the shuttles were gigantic; they were roughly the correct size, IF you accept that they are supposed to be 24 feet in length (which is said out loud by our dear Captain Kirk) and not 21 feet, which is the length of Gene Winfield’s studio prop Galileo.Refresh my memory, please. This is a 1080 foot Enterprise, right?
I agree, just fine. If I may though, @Professor Moriarty the 'W' does seem to hug the 'i' closer than the other letters do their respective neighbors. Maybe that was having an effect on your outcome?Nice work.Oh and that "W" is just fine.
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It is indeed called kerning and yes, now that you say that I do see it. What’s weird is that I never noticed it while I was drawing the name… it’s only really noticeable to me now that it’s slapped on the hull.I think I need to angle the lowercase i away from the W just a bit as well, and it will all flow together more smoothly.
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