Not only did I watch many of the shows highlighted, I even remember that issue of TV Guide! Wow I'm getting old.
Not only did I watch many of the shows highlighted, I even remember that issue of TV Guide! Wow I'm getting old.
As for why VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA crewmen had red or blue overalls, that's probably all Irwin Allen could scrape up.
Huh???There were three colors: red, blue and light grey. But the grey and blue were so close, it was east to get them confused (especially in black and white).
As for Kirk's tunic color, they didn't make it green in the third season when they switched to the double knit fabric, so it was accept that Kirk wore "command gold." The animated series and Mego action figures ran with that as well. While the dolls don't mean much on their own, the animated series was run by Roddenberry and Fontana and neither one insisted on making Kirk or Sulu's tunics green.
The blu rays may be more "studio color" accurate but they are inaccurate otherwise.
Which part? I'll clarify. The tunic color? It was accepted as gold not green, but the blu rays were made to stress the green.Huh???
Huh???
Which part? I'll clarify. The tunic color? It was accepted as gold not green, but the blu rays were made to stress the green.
The Voyage outfits? That was pretty clear.
He means the tunics may have leaned green in person, but everybody with a color TV turned on Star Trek and saw gold.![]()
Did the Voyage colors signify anything in particular?
I will say that I find all of the Irwin Allen shows to be pretty brainless (an assessment I share with a lot of 60s contemporaries), but silly as Voyage is (I laughed out loud several times at the giant plant monster that starred on the latest episode), it's still somehow fun to watch. I cannot say the same of Lost in Space or Time Tunnel.
BUT, put yourself back in time to December 1966, when the show was in its first season. When do you suppose you'd have caught on that the colors have significance?
By that time there had been one significant onscreen clue: In "Dagger of the Mind" Van Gelder is spotted somewhere he didn't belong, apparently because he was wearing a red coverall uniform. "Hey you! From Engineering!"
By the way, for those thinking I had a hole in my head for calling Kirk's uniform "brown", I used this picture as representative and did a color-search to figure out what it is.
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This color is "Barley Corn" -- "primarily a color from Yellow color family. It is a mixture of orange and brown color."
(I recognize that sometimes the uniform comes across as chartreuse, too. But the color above feels the most common. I'd definitely call this brown or bronze before I called it yellow).
Oh that's very helpful! Thank you.
This color is "Barley Corn" -- "primarily a color from Yellow color family. It is a mixture of orange and brown color."
(I recognize that sometimes the uniform comes across as chartreuse, too. But the color above feels the most common. I'd definitely call this brown or bronze before I called it yellow).
I don't see gold what so ever in those photo
My favorite thread subject, command gold or green? I wonder why it’s my fave.
It has been done to death elsewhere if ppl want to search.
I saw a S3 tunic in the Detroit Science Center under bright white light. It was greenish-yellow. Chartreuse, a very 60s color, as was the gray blue science and cherry red engineering. I even posted greeting cards from the mid 60s with that palette. A lot had to do with velour. The S3’ photograph a bit greener to my eye b/c they don’t have that nap.
Including in line to be a commander of people, even if learning lots of jobs now (e.g. Sulu, Chekov).
Quartermasters, pursers, medical officers, chaplains -- those are explicitly staff officers in my 1944 Bluejacket's Manual. Gunnery and navigation had their own departments, and on Trek, their officers wear command colors. Would they have been line officers back in the day? What about engineers and damage control officers?
I believe most of the above were traditionally warrant officers rather than commissioned line officers. The only exception were engineers who IIRC were a parallel track of commissioned officers similar to the modern staff officer at inception.
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