Yep. The artists are the ones who end up being counted on to have back-ups, even though they aren't supposed to, and could, theoretically, get in trouble for having them. Over on Facebook, Mojo was just talking about this:
It sounds like the "vintage" starships that appear in the new Picard trailer were sourced from Eaglemoss, which is a step forward, since a side-effect of their ship-model line was assembling an archive of modernized, good-to-high quality 3D models of nearly every ship that's ever been in Star Trek.
Adam "Mojo" Lebowitz said:Some people have retained assets over the years. It's a sticky subject, because legally you're NOT supposed to, but in reality, many of these assets would have disappeared if it weren't for artists taking them home. Companies lose data all the time - stuff doesn't get backed up, stuff gets backed up in formats no longer readable, company goes out of business and no one archives the material, studios DO archive material but no one ever checks to see if it's all there, or those backups get lost or are managed by people who have no idea how to load and check a 3D model.
So, 20 years later, if someone asked Paramount, "Hi, I'm officially licensed to make a model kit of the Enterprise E, can you send us the Lightwave model made by Digital Domain" they'd laugh. No one would even know what you're talking about or where to send you.
Those models would (and many have) been literally lost to the wind and only still exist on the hard drives of artists who kept their own archives for safe keeping.
Digital asset management is only now becoming an official job, but in years prior it's a wasteland.
It sounds like the "vintage" starships that appear in the new Picard trailer were sourced from Eaglemoss, which is a step forward, since a side-effect of their ship-model line was assembling an archive of modernized, good-to-high quality 3D models of nearly every ship that's ever been in Star Trek.
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