Memory Alpha
Memory Alpha
m (r2.7.5) (Bot: Modifying de:Liste wiederverwendeten Materials)
(33 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{realworld}}
 
{{realworld}}
 
{{disambiguation|the interactive in-universe use of scaled miniatures, please see [[Model]]. For model kits|Star Trek model kits}}
 
{{disambiguation|the interactive in-universe use of scaled miniatures, please see [[Model]]. For model kits|Star Trek model kits}}
A '''studio model''' (or '''filming model''', as it is also referred to) is a type of scale miniature used in the ''[[Star Trek]]'' live-action series and [[Star Trek films|films]] to represent various (inanimate) objects, craft or ships. Strictly speaking, the term is applicable to all the types hereafter mentioned.
+
A '''studio model''' (or '''filming model''', as it is also referred to) is a type of scale miniature used in the ''[[Star Trek]]'' live-action television series and {{Star Trek films}} to represent various (inanimate) objects, craft or ships. Strictly speaking, the term is applicable to all the types hereafter mentioned. As production asset, a studio model is currently understood to be a [[:Category: Visual effects companies|visual effects]] element.
 
{{Studio models}}
 
{{Studio models}}
   
 
==Filming model==
 
==Filming model==
 
[[File:DY-100 and USS Enterprise studio models filmed at Film Effects of Hollywood.jpg|thumb|"Hero" ([[Constitution class model (original)#Eleven-foot model|USS ''Enterprise'']]), and "Guest" model ([[DY-100 class|''Botany Bay'']]) on stage at [[Film Effects of Hollywood]]]]
In practice, the terms studio model and filming model (the latter of which is more relevant to this case) have been reserved for those miniatures that served as the primary models used for second-unit filming in productions. As far as repetitive productions were concerned, a further distinction was sometimes made in:
+
In practice, both expressions "studio model" and "filming model" (the latter of which is more applicable to this case) have been habitually reserved to indicate those miniatures that served as the primary models used for second-unit filming in productions. As far as repetitive productions were concerned, a further distinction was sometimes made in:
*[[File:DY-100 and USS Enterprise studio models filmed at Film Effects of Hollywood.jpg|thumb|"Hero" ([[Constitution class model (original)#Eleven-foot model|USS ''Enterprise'']]), and "Guest" model ([[DY-100 class|''Botany Bay'']]) on stage at [[Film Effects of Hollywood]]]]'''"Hero" models''' – intended for regular use – represented the best miniatures, used for beauty shots and close angles. These were typically the largest, most detailed and best-made models.
 
*'''"Guest" models''' – intended for unique or irregular use – were often made more simply and cheaply. In many cases, they were repainted or modified for reuse as other ships in later episodes.
+
*'''"Hero" models''' – intended for regular use – represented the best miniatures, used for beauty shots and close angles. These were typically the largest, most detailed and best-made models.
  +
*'''"Guest" models''' – intended for unique or irregular use – were often made more simply and cheaply. In many cases, they were repainted or modified for reuse as other objects in later episodes. These models, when they concerned [[starship]]s, were sometimes referred to by visual effects staffers, among others [[Adam "Mojo" Lebowitz]] of [[Foundation Imaging]], by the expression '''Ship-of-the-Week'''. ({{STTM|1|6|51}})
   
In some cases, footage of a model was reused as a stock element, and simply referred to as a different ship. Time and cost considerations were the primary reason for such reuse. According to model maker [[Gregory Jein]] (in an interview appearing in [[TNG Season 3 DVD]] special features), the art, and visual effects departments typically had three to four weeks to design and create each model, during the run of a series – sometimes less time. It should be noted that on these occasions, detailing and finishing quality of the filming models would rarely have gotten the seal of approval of professional model makers of, for example, display models for museums. Professional modeler Jason Eaton, who restored the [[McKinley type#Studio model|''McKinley''-type studio model]] for the auction winner of the model, has noted in this respect, "''(...)it NEVER ceases to shock me how rough some of these models are, under close scrutiny. I know they're made under impossible deadlines, but man, some of those seam lines and bubbles in the castings made me cringe, when I left things untouched... you have to match what you're making to what exists!!''" [http://www.therpf.com/f10/earth-station-mckinley-56918/#post781904] The practical reason for this was that in the pre-High Definition television age, a high level of quality detailing would have taken up more time, and thus more money, and was not necessary anyway, as possible shortcomings would not have been discernible on-screen. The build of a (hero) model during the pre-production stage of a television series (due to the larger amount of expected close-ups), or a model for a movie (due to the greater demands made of the model for big screen requirements), was a different story altogether, typically taking up considerably more time. The [[Galaxy class model#Six-foot model|six-foot USS ''Enterprise''-D model]] for example, took three months to build, discounting the design stage, whereas the [[Constitution class model (refit)#Eight-foot motion pictures model|movie ''Enterprise'']] took a whopping 14 months to complete from start to finish. (''[[The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture]]'', p. 207)
+
In some cases, footage of a model was reused as a stock element, and simply referred to as a different ship. Time and cost considerations were the primary reason for such reuse. According to model maker [[Gregory Jein]] (in an interview appearing in [[TNG Season 3 DVD]]-special features), the art, and visual effects departments typically had three to four weeks to design and create each model, during the run of a series – sometimes less time. It should be noted that on these occasions, detailing and finishing quality of the filming models would rarely have gotten the seal of approval of professional model makers of, for example, display models for museums. Professional modeler Jason Eaton, who restored the [[McKinley type#Studio model|''McKinley''-type studio model]] for the auction winner of the model, has noted in this respect, "''(...)it NEVER ceases to shock me how rough some of these models are, under close scrutiny. I know they're made under impossible deadlines, but man, some of those seam lines and bubbles in the castings made me cringe, when I left things untouched... you have to match what you're making to what exists!!''" [http://www.therpf.com/f10/earth-station-mckinley-56918/#post781904] The practical reason for this was that in the pre-High Definition television age, a high level of quality detailing would have taken up more time, and thus more money, and was not necessary anyway, as possible shortcomings would not have been discernible on-screen. Model and prop maker [[Ed Miarecki]], formerly of [[Science Fiction Modelmaking Associates]] and [[Industrial Light & Magic]] (ILM), has even put it more crassly when he stated, "''These models were never meant to last. They were only designed for one thing, then they become dumpster fodder.''" (''[[FanAddicts!]]'', Season 1, Episode 3: Star Trek) The build of a (hero) model during the pre-production stage of a television series (due to the larger amount of expected close-ups), or a model for a movie (due to the greater demands made of the model for big screen requirements), was a different story altogether, typically taking up considerably more time. The [[Galaxy class model#Six-foot model|six-foot USS ''Enterprise''-D model]] for example, took three months to build, discounting the design stage, whereas the [[Constitution class model (refit)#Eight-foot motion pictures model|movie ''Enterprise'']] took a whopping 14 months to complete from start to finish. (''[[The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture]]'', p. 207)
   
 
Although the term "studio model" traditionally has been used to refer to physical miniatures, the advent of [[CGI|Computer Generated Imaging]] (CGI for short) in the [[1990s]] (most notably thanks to the series ''[[Babylon 5]]''), meant that the definition had to be expanded to include CGI models as well''
 
Although the term "studio model" traditionally has been used to refer to physical miniatures, the advent of [[CGI|Computer Generated Imaging]] (CGI for short) in the [[1990s]] (most notably thanks to the series ''[[Babylon 5]]''), meant that the definition had to be expanded to include CGI models as well''
Line 15: Line 16:
 
===Building a physical filming model===
 
===Building a physical filming model===
 
There were basically two methods of building used in the movie industry of constructing filming miniatures and both have been used in the ''Star Trek'' franchise:
 
There were basically two methods of building used in the movie industry of constructing filming miniatures and both have been used in the ''Star Trek'' franchise:
*Classical build-up method: This has been the most common way of building a studio model and has been used in the industry from its very inception, right up to the advent of CGI. Essentially, it is almost the same method as someone building a commercial model kit, starting from the inside, applying parts and details as one goes along. Traditionally, wood has been the material of choice and has been used well into the [[1960s]]. Models could be made out of massive wood (such as the [[Constitution class model (original)#Three-foot model|three-foot ''Enterprise'']] and the [[D7 class model|''D7''-Class]]) or, if internal lighting was required, the wood was hollowed out (for instance, in the case of the secondary hull, [[bridge]] and [[nacelle]]s of the [[Constitution class model (original)#Eleven-foot model|eleven-foot ''Enterprise'']]). New materials like plastics and fiberglass became available in the 1960s and [[1970s]] and largely replaced wood as the premiere construction material, because they became cheaper, easier and faster to work with. Vacuum-formed parts typically were applied to an armature framework (needed for internal strength and often as a mounting point for filming), resulting in models that were lighter than if they were made out of wood. The saucer section of the eleven-foot ''Enterprise'' was the first piece constructed this way and the movie ''Enterprise'' was a complete build around an armature. Apart from producing custom-made vacuum-formed parts, parts from any and all commercially available model kits could also be applied to construct a studio model (for example, the [[long range shuttle]] and the original [[Borg cube#The physical studio models|Borg cube]]). This method of building resulted in a one-of-a-kind model and has been used to produce the models for [[TOS]] and the ''Star Trek'' films.
+
*Classical build-up method: This has been the most common way of building a studio model and has been used in the industry from its very inception, right up to the advent of CGI. Essentially, it is almost the same method as someone building a commercial model kit, starting from the inside, applying parts and details as one goes along. Traditionally, wood has been the material of choice and has been used well into the [[1960s]]. Models could be made out of massive wood (such as the [[Constitution class model (original)#Three-foot model|three-foot ''Enterprise'']] and the [[D7 class model|''D7''-Class]]) or, if internal lighting was required, the wood was hollowed out (for instance, in the case of the secondary hull, [[bridge]] and [[nacelle]]s of the [[Constitution class model (original)#Eleven-foot model|eleven-foot ''Enterprise'']]). New materials like plastics and fiberglass became available in the 1960s and [[1970s]] and largely replaced wood as the premiere construction material, because they became cheaper, easier and faster to work with. Vacuum-formed parts typically were applied to an armature framework (needed for internal strength and often as a mounting point for filming), resulting in models that were lighter than if they were made out of wood. The saucer section of the eleven-foot ''Enterprise'' was the first piece constructed this way and the movie ''Enterprise'' was a complete build around an armature. Apart from producing custom-made vacuum-formed parts, parts from any and all commercially available model kits could also be applied to construct a studio model (for example, the [[long range shuttle]] and the original [[Borg cube model|Borg cube]]). This method of building resulted in a one-of-a-kind model and has been used to produce the models for [[TOS]] and the ''Star Trek'' films.
 
{{bginfo|Vacuum forming is one of the oldest methods of molding organic polymers, with widespread use since the development of modern plastics. A negative mold is produced, in which heated plastic is poured. The air between the plastic and mold is sucked out to achieve a perfect fit. Once the plastic has cooled, the part, called a cast, is removed from the mold. Contrary to the model kit industry, which uses very expensive metal molds, model makers in the movie industry normally make their molds out of cheap, baked clay, since the part needed is often a one-off. An additional advantage is that details such as grid-lines can be inscribed before the mold is baked. The mold is often destroyed when the cast is removed from it.}}
 
{{bginfo|Vacuum forming is one of the oldest methods of molding organic polymers, with widespread use since the development of modern plastics. A negative mold is produced, in which heated plastic is poured. The air between the plastic and mold is sucked out to achieve a perfect fit. Once the plastic has cooled, the part, called a cast, is removed from the mold. Contrary to the model kit industry, which uses very expensive metal molds, model makers in the movie industry normally make their molds out of cheap, baked clay, since the part needed is often a one-off. An additional advantage is that details such as grid-lines can be inscribed before the mold is baked. The mold is often destroyed when the cast is removed from it.}}
 
{| class="wiki-sidebar" style="float:right;"
*Master-Mold-Cast method: This method became viable when newer composite materials started to become economically available in the late 1970s, early [[1980s]] (not without its risks, as several model makers would die from the then not understood chemical side-effects from working with these materials, as attested to by several colleagues in 2011 (''[[Sense of Scale]]'', disc 1). The first stage using this method was the production of a '''master''', sometimes also referred to as a '''template''' or as a '''pattern'''. The master was a solid rudimentary (part of the) model, typically made out of Styrofoam, clay or a combination thereof. It was then used to produce a negative '''mold'''. Contrary to the molds normally used to produce vacuum-formed parts, this mold was made out of a flexible material, like silicone rubber. Into this mold, heated material such as acrylic plastic, resin or fiberglass was poured, resulting – after cooling off – in a positive '''cast'''. These cast were then assembled, often around an aluminum armature, into a complete model. At first glance, this seemed like a more elaborate method of building a studio model, but there were distinct advantages compared to the classical method of build-up.
 
**In some cases, detailing of the model could be sped up. Whereas detailing on a classical build-up could be time-consuming, detailing on a master could be quick and dirty, using everyday items like masking tape, pins, paper clips and such. If clay was used, details could be carved in. Either way, the details would be permanently imprinted onto the mold. In the case of the six-foot USS ''Enterprise''-D model, which (together with the [[Galaxy_class_model#Two-foot_model|two-feet model]]) was among the first ''Star Trek'' models to be produced this way, a translucent material was used to produce the casts. The parts were painted and, where lighted windows were supposed to be, the paint was merely scraped away (or, if used, masking tape was removed after painting) to allow the internal lighting to shine through, a vastly time-saving method compared to drilling out holes, normally used up until then, when constructing a model the classic way.
 
**A major advantage of this method, which was more of an issue in television productions (due to its repetitive nature), was reproducibility. Since the molds were made out of a flexible material, they could be easily and more importantly undamaged, removed from the casts and used over and over again. As the masters were usually too damaged after use, they were normally discarded but it was the molds that were to become the working capital of the model maker. They could be used to quickly produce copies and replacement parts to various ends. For example, the molds of the two-foot ''Enterprise-D'' and ''Enterprise''-C were used to produce the [[Niagara_class#Studio_model|''Niagara''-class]] and [[Freedom class#Background|''Freedom''-class]]; the molds of the [[Galaxy class model#Four-foot model|four-foot ''Enterprise''-D]] were used to construct parts for the [[Nebula class#The physical studio model|''Nebula''-class studio model]], a break-away model for {{e|Cause and Effect}} and a limited, commercially available production-run of twelve for the {{w|Viacom Entertainment Store}}, as were the molds for the [[D'deridex class#Physical studio models|''D'deridex''-class]], also serving for the construction of a second studio model.
 
:The first known model-maker who employed an early variant of the method for the ''Star Trek'' franchise was [[WonderWorks Inc.|Brick Price Movie Miniatures]], in constructing the abandoned [[Constitution class model (refit)#.22Phase II.22 model|''Phase II Enterprise'' model]]. Price retained the molds of the model when he was pulled from the project in {{y|1978}} and has used them since, to produce several display [[model]]s for the {{w|Planet Hollywood}} restaurant franchise in the 1990s. This method of constructing a studio model has been the method of choice of Gregory Jein and [[Tony Meininger]], and the vast majority of models for televised ''Star Trek'' (beginning with [[TNG]]) were constructed this way. It was possible to retro-apply the method to existing models, using them as master. Molds were taken from the original ''D7'' model for ''Star Trek: Phase II'' and from the [[Oberth_class#Physical_studio_models|USS ''Grissom'' model]] to produce the {{SS|Vico}}. However, there was a realistic chance to damage the original models (it is conceivable that the repaint performed on the ''D7'' model in 1977 was done to repair damage when the mold was removed).
 
{| class="wiki-sidebar" style="width:100%;"
 
 
|-
 
|-
! colspan="4" style="text-align:center;" id="Chronicle of a filming model build at Industrial Light & Magic using the Master-Mold-Cast method" | Chronicle of a filming model build at Industrial Light & Magic using the Master-Mold-Cast method
+
! colspan="5" style="text-align:center;" id="Chronicle of a filming model build at ILM using the Master-Mold-Cast method" | Chronicle of a filming model build at ILM using the Master-Mold-Cast method
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build full-scale plans studied by Bill Concannom and Ease Owyeung.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build full-scale plans studied by Bill Concannom and Ease Owyeung.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build aluminum armature.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build aluminum armature.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master with station points.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master with station points.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:USS Enterprise-D studio model master.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:USS Enterprise-D studio model master.jpg|125px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build primary hull master with station points filled with foam.jpg|125px]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
| class="even" | <center>Concannom (l) and Owyeung studying the 1:1 plans</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Concannom (l) and Owyeung studying the 1:1 plans</center>
Line 34: Line 32:
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master with plexiglass station points (ribs)</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master with plexiglass station points (ribs)</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Seeds filling in the ribs of the secondary hull master with high density polyfoam</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Seeds filling in the ribs of the secondary hull master with high density polyfoam</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Primary hull master filled with foam before sanding down</center>
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build primary hull master with station points filled with foam.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with station points filled with clay and sanded down.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with station points filled with clay and sanded down.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Howie Weed.jpg|75px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Howie Weed.jpg|100px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master primary hull details applied.jpg|75px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master primary hull details applied.jpg|100px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Gregory Jein, Howie Weed, and Bill George.jpg|125px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with coated with bondo before sanded down.jpg|125px]]
 
|-
 
|-
| class="even" | <center>Primary hull master filled with foam before sanding down</center>
 
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master filled with clay and sculpted down to station points</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master filled with clay and sculpted down to station points</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master detailed with masking tape by Weed</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master detailed with masking tape by Weed</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Detailing the primary hull master with masking tape</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Detailing the primary hull master with masking tape</center>
|-
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Gregory Jein, Howie Weed, and Bill George.jpg|150px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with coated with bondo before sanded down.jpg|150px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:USS Enterprise-D studio model mold and cast.jpg|100px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by Ease Owyeung.jpg|150px]]
 
|-
 
 
| class="even" | <center>Jein, Weed and George inscribing details onto the master of the secondary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Jein, Weed and George inscribing details onto the master of the secondary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master in stabilizing intermediate stage coated with Bondo before sanded down</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Secondary hull master in stabilizing intermediate stage coated with Bondo before sanded down</center>
| class="even" | <center>Casey and Owyeung pulling off a mold from the transparent cast of the primary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Owyeung detailing the cast of the top primary hull</center>
 
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by pre-painting masking tape.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:USS Enterprise-D studio model mold and cast.jpg|75px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with neon lighting added.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by Ease Owyeung.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with arrmature installed.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by pre-painting masking tape.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull assembled by Bill Concannom.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with neon lighting added.jpg|125px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with arrmature installed.jpg|125px]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
| class="even" | <center>Casey and Owyeung pulling off a mold from the transparent cast of the primary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Owyeung detailing the cast of the top primary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Cast (top half) primary hull applied with pre-painting masking tape</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Cast (top half) primary hull applied with pre-painting masking tape</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Cast (top half) primary hull endowed with neon lighting</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Cast (top half) primary hull endowed with neon lighting</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Primary hull cast with armature installed</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>Primary hull cast with armature installed</center>
| class="even" | <center>Concannom assembles the secondary hull casts</center>
 
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build complete assembled cast primary hull given primary coat of paint by Bill George.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull assembled by Bill Concannom.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build nearly completed primary hull finetuned by Bill George.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build complete assembled cast primary hull given primary coat of paint by Bill George.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Bill George.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build nearly completed primary hull finetuned by Bill George.jpg|125px]]
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Ease Owyeung.jpg|150px]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Bill George.jpg|125px]]
 
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Ease Owyeung.jpg|125px]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
| class="even" | <center>Concannom assembles the secondary hull casts</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>George giving the assembled primary hull its first primer paint coat</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>George giving the assembled primary hull its first primer paint coat</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>George finetuning the nearly complete primary hull</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>George finetuning the nearly complete primary hull</center>
Line 75: Line 70:
 
| class="even" | <center>...as it is by Owyeung</center>
 
| class="even" | <center>...as it is by Owyeung</center>
 
|-
 
|-
! colspan="4" style="text-align:center;" id="''Galaxy''-class USS ''Enterprise''-1701-D | ''Galaxy''-class USS ''Enterprise''-1701-D
+
! colspan="5" style="text-align:center;" id="''Galaxy''-class USS ''Enterprise''-1701-D | ''Galaxy''-class USS ''Enterprise''-1701-D
 
|}
 
|}
 
*Master-Mold-Cast method: This method became viable when newer composite materials started to become economically available in the late 1970s, early [[1980s]] (not without its risks, as several model makers would die from the then not understood chemical side-effects from working with these materials, as attested to by several colleagues in 2011 (''[[Sense of Scale]]'', disc 1). The first stage using this method was the production of a '''master''', sometimes also referred to as a '''template''' or as a '''pattern'''. The master was a solid rudimentary (part of the) model, typically made out of Styrofoam, clay or a combination thereof. It was then used to produce a negative '''mold'''. Contrary to the molds normally used to produce vacuum-formed parts, this mold was made out of a flexible material, like silicone rubber. Into this mold, heated material such as acrylic plastic, resin or fiberglass was poured, resulting &ndash; after cooling off &ndash; in a positive '''cast'''. These cast were then assembled, often around an aluminum armature, into a complete model. At first glance, this seemed like a more elaborate method of building a studio model, but there were distinct advantages compared to the classical method of build-up.
 
**In some cases, detailing of the model could be sped up. Whereas detailing on a classical build-up could be time-consuming, detailing on a master could be quick and dirty, using everyday items like masking tape, pins, paper clips and such. If clay was used, details could be carved in. Either way, the details would be permanently imprinted onto the mold. In the case of the six-foot USS ''Enterprise''-D model, which (together with the [[Galaxy_class_model#Two-foot_model|two-feet model]]) was among the first ''Star Trek'' models to be produced this way, a translucent material was used to produce the casts. The parts were painted and, where lighted windows were supposed to be, the paint was merely scraped away (or, if used, masking tape was removed after painting) to allow the internal lighting to shine through, a vastly time-saving method compared to drilling out holes, normally used up until then, when constructing a model the classic way.
 
**A major advantage of this method, which was more of an issue in television productions (due to its repetitive nature), was reproducibility. Since the molds were made out of a flexible material, they could be easily and more importantly undamaged, removed from the casts and used over and over again. As the masters were usually too damaged after use, they were normally discarded but it was the molds that were to become the working capital of the model maker. They could be used to quickly produce copies and replacement parts to various ends. For example, the molds of the two-foot ''Enterprise-D'' and ''Enterprise''-C were used to produce the [[Niagara_class#Studio_model|''Niagara''-class]] and [[Freedom class#Background|''Freedom''-class]]; the molds of the [[Galaxy class model#Four-foot model|four-foot ''Enterprise''-D]] were used to construct parts for the [[Nebula class#The physical studio model|''Nebula''-class studio model]], a break-away model for {{e|Cause and Effect}} and a limited, commercially available production-run of twelve for the {{w|Viacom Entertainment Store}}, as were the molds for the [[D'deridex class#Physical studio models|''D'deridex''-class]], also serving for the construction of a second studio model.
 
:The first known model-maker who employed an early variant of the method for the ''Star Trek'' franchise was [[WonderWorks Inc.|Brick Price Movie Miniatures]], in constructing the abandoned [[Constitution class model (refit)#.22Phase II.22 model|''Phase II Enterprise'' model]]. Price retained the molds of the model when he was pulled from the project in {{y|1978}} and has used them since, to produce several display [[model]]s for the {{w|Planet Hollywood}} restaurant franchise in the 1990s. This method of constructing a studio model has been the method of choice of Gregory Jein and [[Tony Meininger]], and the vast majority of models for televised ''Star Trek'' (beginning with [[TNG]]) were constructed this way. It was possible to retro-apply the method to existing models, using them as master. Molds were taken from the original ''D7'' model for ''Star Trek: Phase II'' and from the [[Oberth_class#Physical_studio_models|USS ''Grissom'' model]] to produce the {{SS|Vico}}. However, there was a realistic chance to damage the original models (it is conceivable that the repaint performed on the ''D7'' model in 1977 was done to repair damage when the mold was removed).
   
 
===Costs of building a physical filming model===
 
===Costs of building a physical filming model===
Line 112: Line 111:
 
|$475,362<br/>Sold for:<br/>$240,000
 
|$475,362<br/>Sold for:<br/>$240,000
 
|$521,616
 
|$521,616
  +
|Unclear if the costs for the abandoned ''Phase II'' model are included.<ref>The [[reference book]] ''[[Star Trek Phase II: The Lost Series]]'', p. 75, strongly indicated it to be the case; As far as the several sets in their various states of completion were concerned, this actually made business sense as they were, albeit with additional redesigns, yet used for ''The Motion Picture'', whereas the ''Phase II'' studio models were all discarded.</ref>
|Unclear if the costs for the abandoned ''Phase II'' model are included.
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|{{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D|-D}}
 
|{{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701-D|-D}}
Line 125: Line 124:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|}
 
|}
 
<small><references /></small>
:''notes'':
 
<references />
 
   
 
Traditionally, studios, those of he ''Star Trek'' franchise included, have habitually balked at the cost incurred by the construction of physical studio models, perceived as (too) high since it was labor intensive manual work. As repartee to this, [[Matthew Grazner]] of [[Hunter/Grazner Industries]], responsible for the construction of break-away models for the [[Son'a collector model]], decided upon at the eleventh hour, has dryly postulated, "''I always say that visual effects are not expensive &ndash; it is the lack of decision making regarding visual effects that is expensive.''" (''[[Cinefex]]'', issue 77, p. 92) Grazner did have a point in his assessment, as the history of the ''Star Trek'' franchise is rife with examples of this, the construction, apart from Grazner's Son'a break-away models, of the eight-foot movie ''Enterprise'' model being a prime example.
 
Traditionally, studios, those of he ''Star Trek'' franchise included, have habitually balked at the cost incurred by the construction of physical studio models, perceived as (too) high since it was labor intensive manual work. As repartee to this, [[Matthew Grazner]] of [[Hunter/Grazner Industries]], responsible for the construction of break-away models for the [[Son'a collector model]], decided upon at the eleventh hour, has dryly postulated, "''I always say that visual effects are not expensive &ndash; it is the lack of decision making regarding visual effects that is expensive.''" (''[[Cinefex]]'', issue 77, p. 92) Grazner did have a point in his assessment, as the history of the ''Star Trek'' franchise is rife with examples of this, the construction, apart from Grazner's Son'a break-away models, of the eight-foot movie ''Enterprise'' model being a prime example.
   
 
===Building a CGI filming model===
 
===Building a CGI filming model===
In a remark, reminiscent of the one that Jein made in respect to physicals studio models, [[John Gross]] of [[Eden FX]], stated that it took on average two- to four weeks to construct a new CGI studio model for an ongoing ''Star Trek'' television production. [http://lcarscom.net/edenfx.htm] For further information,
+
In a remark, reminiscent of the one that Jein made in regard to physicals studio models, [[John Gross]] of [[Eden FX]], stated that it took on average two- to four weeks to construct a new CGI studio model for an ongoing ''Star Trek'' television production. [http://lcarscom.net/edenfx.htm] For further information,
 
:*See main article: [[CGI#Building_a_CGI_model|Building a CGI model]]
 
:*See main article: [[CGI#Building_a_CGI_model|Building a CGI model]]
   
Line 140: Line 138:
 
[[File:USS Excelsior study model by Nilo Rodis as USS Alka-Selsior.jpg|thumb|left|''Excelsior''-class study model, a direction not taken...]]
 
[[File:USS Excelsior study model by Nilo Rodis as USS Alka-Selsior.jpg|thumb|left|''Excelsior''-class study model, a direction not taken...]]
 
[[File:USS Alka-Selsior.jpg|thumb|...yet still showing up on screen]]
 
[[File:USS Alka-Selsior.jpg|thumb|...yet still showing up on screen]]
A '''study model''' or '''concept model''', as it is also sometimes referred to, is behind-the-scenes nomenclature for a rough miniature built to study how a particular design might look in three dimensions and will normally lead up to the full-fledged studio models. Study models could be extremely crude, sometimes made of illustration or foam core board, or sometimes cobbled together from found objects, or sculpted from foam or other substances. Often crudely detailed, they were not meant to be used in actual productions, but to evaluate a design from all angles, before moving forward with or scrapping the design. However, they could be detailed enough for them to occasionally end up on camera when a need arose in a pinch of having them appear in the background of a shot where their limitations would not be apparent, such as the [[Nebula_class#The_BoBW_kit-bash_models|proto-''Nebula''-class]] and the various [[Excelsior_class_model#Study_models|proto-''Excelsior''s]].
+
A '''study model''' or '''concept model''', as it is also sometimes referred to, is behind-the-scenes nomenclature for a rough miniature built to study how a particular design might look in three dimensions and will normally lead up to the full-fledged studio models. Study models could be extremely crude, sometimes made of illustration or foam core board, or sometimes cobbled together from found objects, or sculpted from foam or other substances. Often crudely detailed, they were not meant to be used in actual productions, but to evaluate a design from all angles, before moving forward with or scrapping the design. However, they could be detailed enough for them to occasionally end up on camera when a need arose in a pinch of having them appear in the background of a shot where their limitations would not be apparent, such as the [[Nebula_class#The_BoBW_kit-bash_models|proto-''Nebula''-class]] and the various [[Excelsior_class_model#Study_models|proto-''Excelsior''s]]. The earliest ''Star Trek'' study model, was the four-inch balsa wooden evaluation model of the ''Enterprise'', [[Matt Jefferies]] constructed in 1964 for the [[NBC]] executives to mull over. ({{STTM|1|10|26}})
   
 
[[File:Federation Holoship study model.jpg|thumb|Scanning model of the Federation Holoship]]
 
[[File:Federation Holoship study model.jpg|thumb|Scanning model of the Federation Holoship]]
Even in the CGI age, study models are occasionally constructed as a visual aid for designers and programmers and/or as a '''scanning model''' for digitizing. Examples were the study model built for {{film|8}} of the [[T'Plana-Hath_type#Study_models|''T'Plana-Hath'']] and the [[Federation holoship model]] and [[Son'a collector]] for {{film|9}}. [[Daren Dochterman]] elaborated in this respect, "''Physical models are often built even when the final product will be CG… in some cases, it's to show producers and others the item in question in a real world context because sometimes a picture on a screen just doesn't make an impact like a real life item does... and on other occasions, it's done to give an in-house model crew something to do to justify billing the production company for it... and to maintain its existence. I'm not saying that was the case here, as I really just don't know... but when I was on ''{{w|The Chronicles of Riddick}}'', we had an in-house model crew led by the great Greg Jein building models of all the ships that we were designing for 3d... the impact of having them in real life was very inspiring for both the crew, and the studio head....''" {{Eavesdropping|2009/04/09/blue-sky-model-reference/#comment-1039}} [[Jim Key]] added, when he wrote up an article on the making of ''Insurrection'', "''I was equally comforted by another comment that both [[Jim Rygiel]] and [[Carlyle Livingston]] made to me&ndash;essentially how they both strive to have maquettes built for pre-visualization, and the importance of study models and/or scanning models. Though many times now the finished form may be in CG, these physical representations still serve their purpose when seeking approvals, since they hide nothing and reveal nook and cranny.''" (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 34, p. 31) As to underscore Key's comment, it was only when the producers were presented with the scanning model of the "Federation Holoship", that a design flaw was detected.
+
Even in the CGI age, study models are occasionally constructed as a visual aid for designers and programmers and/or as a '''scanning model''' for digitizing. Examples were the study model built for {{film|8}} of the [[T'Plana-Hath_type#Study_models|''T'Plana-Hath'']] and the [[Federation holoship model]] and [[Son'a collector]] for {{film|9}}. [[Daren Dochterman]] elaborated in this respect, "''Physical models are often built even when the final product will be CG...in some cases, it's to show producers and others the item in question in a real world context because sometimes a picture on a screen just doesn't make an impact like a real life item does... and on other occasions, it's done to give an in-house model crew something to do to justify billing the production company for it... and to maintain its existence. I'm not saying that was the case here, as I really just don't know... but when I was on ''{{w|The Chronicles of Riddick}}'', we had an in-house model crew led by the great Greg Jein building models of all the ships that we were designing for 3d... the impact of having them in real life was very inspiring for both the crew, and the studio head....''" {{Eavesdropping|2009/04/09/blue-sky-model-reference/#comment-1039}} [[Jim Key]] added, when he wrote up an article on the making of ''Insurrection'', "''I was equally comforted by another comment that both [[Jim Rygiel]] and [[Carlyle Livingston]] made to me&ndash;essentially how they both strive to have maquettes built for pre-visualization, and the importance of study models and/or scanning models. Though many times now the finished form may be in CG, these physical representations still serve their purpose when seeking approvals, since they hide nothing and reveal nook and cranny.''" (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 34, p. 31) As to underscore Key's comment, it was only when the producers were presented with the scanning model of the "Federation Holoship", that a design flaw was detected.
   
 
===Kit-bash===
 
===Kit-bash===
 
[[File:USS Curry.jpg|thumb|The heavily kit-bashed model, {{USS|Curry}}]]
 
[[File:USS Curry.jpg|thumb|The heavily kit-bashed model, {{USS|Curry}}]]
The term "'''kit-bash'''" is a behind-the-scenes term used to describe a ship, station or any other model, created by the [[:Category:production staff|production staff]] from already existing parts of other ship, and station studio models, additional [[Star Trek model kits|model kits]] (not necessarily ''Star Trek''-related), and/or any and all items at hand during the time of building, deemed appropriate for application. On occasion the related term "'''kludge'''" was also used to designate such builds. Kit-bashing has been a common method for creating filming models in the science fiction genre, such as in the movie {{w|Alien (film)|''Alien''}}, where they served as the hero models. In ''Star Trek'', however, kit-bash models served primarily as (deep) background elements, the method lending itself for quick and cheap assembly when additional elements were required in a very short time.
+
The term "'''kit-bash'''" is a behind-the-scenes term used to describe a ship, station or any other model, created by the [[:Category:production staff|production staff]] from already existing parts of other ship, and station studio models, additional [[Star Trek model kits|model kits]] (not necessarily ''Star Trek''-related), and/or any and all items at hand during the time of building, deemed appropriate for application. On occasion the related term "'''kludge'''" was also used to designate such builds. ''Star Trek'' Scenic Artist [[Anthony Fredickson]] was considered especially adept in the technique of kit-bashing by his colleagues, as they have endowed him with the nickname "King of Kludge" {{DrexFiles|2009/04/12/tribble-ation-set-details/}} Kit-bashing has been a common method for creating filming models in the science fiction genre, such as in the movie {{w|Alien (film)|''Alien''}}, where they served as the hero models.
  +
  +
An early example of kit-bashing in ''Star Trek'' is the ''[[Aurora (NC-17740)|Aurora]]'' in {{e|The Way to Eden}}, which was the reuse of one of the two [[Tholian starship (23rd century)|Tholian starship]] models, featured in {{e|The Tholian Web}}, complete with [[Constitution class]] nacelles and [[D7-class]] pylons, they originating from their respective [[AMT]] ''Star Trek'' model kits (No's S951 and S952). In later incarnations of ''Star Trek'', however, kit-bash models served primarily as (deep) background elements, the method lending itself for quick and cheap assembly when additional elements were required in a very short time.
   
 
The vast majority of ships seen in the aftermath of [[Battle of Wolf 359]], in ''The Next Generation''{{'}}s two-part episodes {{e|The Best of Both Worlds, Part II}}, and at the [[Surplus Depot Z15]], in {{e|Unification I}}, were kit-bashes. Among the Federation classes shown there that are designated 'kit-bashes' were the [[New_Orleans_class#Studio_model|''New Orleans''-class]], [[Springfield_class#Studio_model|''Springfield''-class]], [[Cheyenne_class#Studio_model|''Cheyenne''-class]] and the proto-''Nebula'', using parts from various model kits, whereas the ''Freedom''-class and ''Niagara''-class were kit-bashed from parts derived from Gregory Jein, Inc.'s own, already existing production assets. Several other kit-bashes were also built for several ''Deep Space Nine'' episodes, most notably {{e|A Time to Stand}} (including the [[Centaur_type#Physical_model|''Centaur''-type]], {{Type|Curry}} and [[Yeager_type#Studio_model|''Yeager''-type]]), again using parts from model kits.
 
The vast majority of ships seen in the aftermath of [[Battle of Wolf 359]], in ''The Next Generation''{{'}}s two-part episodes {{e|The Best of Both Worlds, Part II}}, and at the [[Surplus Depot Z15]], in {{e|Unification I}}, were kit-bashes. Among the Federation classes shown there that are designated 'kit-bashes' were the [[New_Orleans_class#Studio_model|''New Orleans''-class]], [[Springfield_class#Studio_model|''Springfield''-class]], [[Cheyenne_class#Studio_model|''Cheyenne''-class]] and the proto-''Nebula'', using parts from various model kits, whereas the ''Freedom''-class and ''Niagara''-class were kit-bashed from parts derived from Gregory Jein, Inc.'s own, already existing production assets. Several other kit-bashes were also built for several ''Deep Space Nine'' episodes, most notably {{e|A Time to Stand}} (including the [[Centaur_type#Physical_model|''Centaur''-type]], {{Type|Curry}} and [[Yeager_type#Studio_model|''Yeager''-type]]), again using parts from model kits.
Line 155: Line 155:
 
===Breakaway model===
 
===Breakaway model===
 
[[File:Destroying the Saratoga.jpg|thumb|Preparing one of the breakaway models of the {{USS|Saratoga|NCC-31911}} for destruction]]
 
[[File:Destroying the Saratoga.jpg|thumb|Preparing one of the breakaway models of the {{USS|Saratoga|NCC-31911}} for destruction]]
A '''breakaway model''' is a model specifically built for on-screen destruction. Models of this kind were typically built for destruction scenes, when it was felt that a convincing destruction could not be achieved through various procedures in post-production, like matting stock footage of explosions over shots of studio models, and when it was deemed that the master models were too valuable for destruction. Normally built at a smaller scale with lighter materials and constructed in such a way that debris would fly off easily, these models were packed with pyrotechnics to be detonated at the directors will. Normal procedure was that those models were suspended from the ceiling and that shots of them were taken by a high-speed camera directly underneath, to emulate normal dispersion of explosions. Typically, several models were made, in order to have the best shot possible. Break-away models for ''Star Trek'' included the [[Miranda_class_model#Other_studio_and_display_models|''Miranda''-class]] ({{DS9|Emissary}}), the [[Galaxy_class_model#Break-Away_model|''Galaxy''-class]] ("Cause and Effect") and both versions of the Borg cube ("The Best of Both Worlds, Part II" and ''First Contact'').
+
A '''breakaway model''' is a model specifically built for on-screen destruction. Models of this kind were typically built for destruction scenes, when it was felt that a convincing destruction could not be achieved through various procedures in post-production, like matting stock footage of explosions over shots of studio models, and when it was deemed that the master models were too valuable for destruction. Normally built at a smaller scale with lighter materials and constructed in such a way through pre-scoring or pre-cutting, that debris would fly off easily, these models were packed with pyrotechnics to be detonated at the directors will. Normal procedure was that those models were suspended from the ceiling and that shots of them were taken by a high-speed camera directly underneath, to emulate normal dispersion of explosions, when the shot footage was played back at at lower frame rate. Typically, several models were made, in order to have the best shot possible. Break-away models for ''Star Trek'' included the [[Miranda_class_model#Other_studio_and_display_models|''Miranda''-class]] ({{DS9|Emissary}}), the [[Galaxy_class_model#Break-Away_model|''Galaxy''-class]] ("Cause and Effect") and both versions of the Borg cube ("The Best of Both Worlds, Part II" and ''First Contact'').
   
 
Advances in CGI have made breakaway models increasingly obsolete.
 
Advances in CGI have made breakaway models increasingly obsolete.
   
 
===Camera test model===
 
===Camera test model===
[[File:Typical camera test model Apollo class.jpg|thumb|A typical foam-core camera test model ([[Studio_models_(TNG)#Apollo_class|''Apollo'' class]] in this case)]]
+
[[File:Typical camera test model Apollo class.jpg|thumb|left|A typical foam-core camera test model ([[Studio_models_(TNG)#Apollo_class|''Apollo'' class]] in this case)]]
  +
[[File:Glenn Neufield and David Takemura setting up a VFX shot.jpg|thumb|Neufeld (l) and [[David Takemura]] setting up a shot for the DS-9 station model with camera test models]]
A '''camera test model''', also known as a '''pre-visualization model''', is a model usually made out of cheap material like paper, cardboard, foam-core or wood, modeled after existing studio models. Detailing varied from very crude to moderate, since they were never intended to appear on-screen. They were typically used by camera teams as visual aids to set up camera shots in pre-production planning before final shooting. Advantages using test models were that the production staff did not have to handle the usually heavier filming models, or as [[Doug Drexler]] once jokingly put it, ''"You only pulled out the big models once you pretty much knew what you needed"'' {{DrexFiles|2009/01/30/new-romulan-shuttle-shots-uncovered/#comment-743}}, and that wear and tear to those models was reduced. Most of the ''Star Trek'' filming models had one or more test model counterparts. Licensed, commercially available models and model kits were known to have fulfilled this role, as well. ({{STC|148}}, p. 48) Examples of these were the [[AMT]] [[Star Trek model kits]] of the {{Class|Danube}}, two of which being sold at auction.[http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=8039] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=8912]
+
A '''camera test model''', also known as a '''pre-visualization model''', is a model usually made out of cheap material like paper, cardboard, wood or Styrofoam in particular, loosely modeled after existing studio models. Detailing varied from very crude to moderate, since they were never intended to appear on-screen. They were typically used by visual effects coordinators/supervisors and camera teams as visual aids to set up camera shots in pre-production planning before final shooting. Advantages using test models were that the production staff did not have to handle the usually heavier filming models, or as [[Doug Drexler]] once jokingly put it, ''"You only pulled out the big models once you pretty much knew what you needed"'' {{DrexFiles|2009/01/30/new-romulan-shuttle-shots-uncovered/#comment-743}}, and that wear and tear to those models was reduced. Most of the ''Star Trek'' filming models had one or more test model counterparts. Licensed, commercially available models and model kits were known to have fulfilled this role, as well. ({{STC|148|48}}) Examples of these were the AMT ''Star Trek'' model kits of the {{Class|Danube}}, two of which being sold at auction.[http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=8039] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=8912]
  +
  +
Too rudimentary to serve as filming models, camera test models have nevertheless been on at least one occasion used as such. Though the technique had already been firmly established by the time [[Glenn Neufeld]] was brought aboard the franchise as visual effects supervisor during the latter half of ''Deep Space Nine''{{'}}s [[DS9 Season 1|first season]], it was Neufeld in particular who embraced the technique and it was he who took the very unusual step of using them as filming models when the production of the [[DS9 Season 2|second season]] episode {{e|Sanctuary}} came up. The episode featured a huge fleet of [[Skrreea]]n refugee ships arriving at [[Deep Space 9]], and Neufeld realized there was no practical way to have each ship individually shot and edited in post-production. He recalled, "''We had to to create all the ships they arrive in. The script read "There are more than ships at the station than we have ever seen before, a ship in every [[docking port]] and hundreds more lined up waiting to dock." As soon as you read something like that, you know you're in for a lot of late nights. We called in our foam fleet. We put them on C-stands, arranged them and shot them six to ten at a time. We'd made marks on the monitor to show where they were, then we'd rearrange them, move the camera further back to make them smaller and shoot them again. When we were finally finished we had this {{w|yellow brick road}} of ships going off in the distance.''" How unusual his approach was at the time, was realized by him when he got a call from post-production editing, "''They told me the negative was covered in scratches, and I thought, my goodness, my shot's been ruined. It turned out to be the background ships. Some of them were so small that the people at the lab thought they were dirt.''" (''[[Cinefantastique]]'', Vol 25 #6/Vol 26 #1, p. 100)
   
 
[[File:Constitution class refit landingbay camera test model.jpg|thumb|left|Animatics of the [[Galileo type shuttlecraft model#The camera test model.2C aka Guido-II|''Guido''-II]] and [[Constitution class model (refit)#The Final Frontier maquettes|''Enterprise'' shuttlebay]] in {{film|5}}]]
 
[[File:Constitution class refit landingbay camera test model.jpg|thumb|left|Animatics of the [[Galileo type shuttlecraft model#The camera test model.2C aka Guido-II|''Guido''-II]] and [[Constitution class model (refit)#The Final Frontier maquettes|''Enterprise'' shuttlebay]] in {{film|5}}]]
 
[[File:Sovereign class Captain's Yacht Cousteau animatics deployment sequence.jpg|thumb|CGI animatics of the [[Cousteau (yacht)#Designing the Cousteau.27s deployment|Cousteau deployment]] in {{film|9}}]]
 
[[File:Sovereign class Captain's Yacht Cousteau animatics deployment sequence.jpg|thumb|CGI animatics of the [[Cousteau (yacht)#Designing the Cousteau.27s deployment|Cousteau deployment]] in {{film|9}}]]
A very closely related use of these models, was their use in the so-called "'''animatics'''". Animatics was a behind-the-scenes term used to denominate short clippings of footage especially shot at the behest of directors and/or visual effects supervisors for evaluation purposes. This footage was normally shot for ascertaining if storyboarded sequences, typically visual effects scenes, came across on-screen as intended. As this footage was essentially only intended for evaluation purposes, visual effects were stripped to their barest necessities, and as such physical models were only marginally required to approximate their appearances in the final production. It was in this specific use that "'''pre-visualization model'''" has become the more commonly used term. The advent of CGI has not abolished the use of animatics, they being a too valuable tool for directors and supervisors. On the contrary, CGI has made it easier to employ the tool. The moment the bare essentials of a CGI model is assembled, i.e. the {{w|wire-frame model}}, "light" versions of the model were typically employed for these pre-evaluation purposes."Light", as in light of RAM-memory computer requirements, in this respect typically meant, basic versions of CGI models as later employed in productions, but without detailing such as texturing, rendering or lighting, often preliminary wire-frame models, clad with a non-nondescript skin.
+
A very closely related use of these models, was their use in the so-called "'''animatics'''". Animatics was a behind-the-scenes term used to denominate short clippings of footage especially shot at the behest of directors and/or visual effects supervisors for evaluation purposes. This footage was normally shot for ascertaining if storyboarded sequences, typically visual effects scenes, came across on-screen as intended. As this footage was essentially only intended for evaluation purposes, visual effects were stripped to their barest necessities, and as such physical models were only marginally required to approximate their appearances in the final production. It was in this specific use that "'''pre-visualization model'''" has become the more commonly used terminology. The advent of CGI has not abolished the use of animatics, they being a too valuable tool for directors and supervisors. On the contrary, CGI has made it easier to employ the tool. The moment the bare essentials of a CGI model is assembled, ''i.e.'' the {{w|wire-frame model}}, "light" versions of the model were typically employed for these pre-evaluation purposes. "Light", as in light RAM-memory computer requirements, in this respect typically meant, basic versions of CGI models as later employed in productions, but without the heavy computer processor usage for detailed texturing, rendering or lighting, often preliminary wire-frame models, clad with a non-nondescript skin.
   
 
[[File:USS Pasteur with inscale Negh'Var class test models.jpg|thumb|left|[[Olympic_class#Studio_model|USS ''Pasteur'' studio model]] with in-scale [[Negh'Var warship]] camera test models]]
 
[[File:USS Pasteur with inscale Negh'Var class test models.jpg|thumb|left|[[Olympic_class#Studio_model|USS ''Pasteur'' studio model]] with in-scale [[Negh'Var warship]] camera test models]]
Line 171: Line 174:
   
 
[[File:Matt Jefferies pre-visualization model of the USS Enterprise interior sets.jpg|thumb|Jefferies' model of the USS ''Enterprise'' interior sets]]
 
[[File:Matt Jefferies pre-visualization model of the USS Enterprise interior sets.jpg|thumb|Jefferies' model of the USS ''Enterprise'' interior sets]]
Several styrofoam test models were also constructed of interior sets &ndash; prior to definitive, full-scale construction &ndash; throughout the run of the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Apart from being an aid in establishing camera angles, they were also an aid in evaluating a set design and, as such, in these cases, the functions of a test model and study model greatly overlapped. Examples of interior set test models were the models for the {{Class|Excelsior}} [[bridge]] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=9695], the interiors of [[Deep Space 9]] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=1313] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=3447], [[stellar cartography]] [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=1691], and the {{Class|Dauntless}} bridge [http://startrekpropcollector.com/trekauctions/item.pl?i=2034], among others. The oldest known such model, was the (cardboard) pre-visualization model [[Matt Jefferies]] constructed in 1966 of the interiors sets for the original ''Enterprise'' as an orientation aid for directors and cameramen. (''[[Star Trek: The Original Series Sketchbook]]'', pp. 94-112)
+
Several styrofoam test models were also constructed of interior sets &ndash; prior to definitive, full-scale construction &ndash; throughout the run of the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Apart from being an aid in establishing camera angles, they were also an aid in evaluating a set design and, as such, in these cases, the functions of a test model and study model greatly overlapped. Examples of interior set test models were the models for the {{Class|Excelsior}} [[bridge]] {{Stala|9695}}, the interiors of [[Deep Space 9]] {{Stala|1313}} {{Stala|3447}}, [[stellar cartography]] {{Stala|1691}}, and the {{Class|Dauntless}} bridge {{Stala|2034}}, among others. The oldest known such model, was the (cardboard) pre-visualization model [[Matt Jefferies]] constructed in 1966 of the interiors sets for the original ''Enterprise'' as an orientation aid for directors and cameramen. (''[[Star Trek: The Original Series Sketchbook]]'', pp. 94-112)
   
With the advent of CGI, the physical test model has become a redundant aid.
+
With the advent of CGI, the physical test model did became a redundant aid.
   
 
===Maquette===
 
===Maquette===
[[File:Constitution class shuttlebay maquette.jpg|thumb|left|Datin's shuttlebay maquette, arguably the first of its kind]]
+
[[File:Constitution class shuttlebay maquette.jpg|thumb|Datin's shuttlebay maquette, arguably the first of its kind for ''Star Trek'']]
[[File:Mars model.jpg|thumb|Doug Drexler with the maquette for "Lifesigns"]]
 
 
Occasionally used to refer to all other types of studio models, the French-derived term '''{{w|maquette}}''' is usually reserved to signify scaled models of immobile structures, such as interiors and buildings, landscape miniatures or [[planet]] miniatures, intended specifically for on-screen use. As such, they are not to be confused with camera test models of interiors (not for on-screen use) and/or sets (full scale constructions for actors to interact with, in real time). Typically, they are constructed out of time and/or budgetary considerations or if an intended setting is deemed too imaginary to realize using existing sets or real life settings. While perhaps not being perceived as "glamorous" as their starship counterparts, and thus less publicized about, maquettes have been utilized throughout most of the run of the ''Star Trek'' franchise.
 
Occasionally used to refer to all other types of studio models, the French-derived term '''{{w|maquette}}''' is usually reserved to signify scaled models of immobile structures, such as interiors and buildings, landscape miniatures or [[planet]] miniatures, intended specifically for on-screen use. As such, they are not to be confused with camera test models of interiors (not for on-screen use) and/or sets (full scale constructions for actors to interact with, in real time). Typically, they are constructed out of time and/or budgetary considerations or if an intended setting is deemed too imaginary to realize using existing sets or real life settings. While perhaps not being perceived as "glamorous" as their starship counterparts, and thus less publicized about, maquettes have been utilized throughout most of the run of the ''Star Trek'' franchise.
   
 
One of the earliest, if not the earliest, examples of such models used in the franchise was [[Richard C. Datin]]'s model of the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}}'s [[Constitution class model (original)#Constitution-class shuttlebay model|shuttlebay]]. He constructed this model in 1966, for the TOS episode {{e|The Galileo Seven}}. Greg Jein repeated this in 1989 with the shuttlebay for the [[refit]]-configuration for use in {{film|5}}.
 
One of the earliest, if not the earliest, examples of such models used in the franchise was [[Richard C. Datin]]'s model of the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}}'s [[Constitution class model (original)#Constitution-class shuttlebay model|shuttlebay]]. He constructed this model in 1966, for the TOS episode {{e|The Galileo Seven}}. Greg Jein repeated this in 1989 with the shuttlebay for the [[refit]]-configuration for use in {{film|5}}.
   
[[File:Earth Studio model prepared by ILM staffer Frank Ordaz.jpg|thumb|ILM staffer [[Frank Ordaz]] preparing the Earth maquette]]
+
[[File:Mars model.jpg|thumb|left|Doug Drexler with the maquette for "Lifesigns"]]
As for buildings, generic futuristic-looking building models were often constructed to be positioned in front of a [[matte painting]], to give the scene additional depth on-screen when filmed, as was the case in the [[Mars]] vista scene in {{VOY|Lifesigns}}. Some of those models were featured in the [[TNG Season 2 DVD]] special feature: "Inside Starfleet Archives", and in it, it was discerned that they were usually built with whatever materials were on hand. Other examples were the models of [[Starfleet Headquarters]] ({{DS9|Paradise Lost}}) and the building blown up in {{VOY|The Killing Game, Part II}}. Though well into the CGI age, that building was built because, as [[Dan Curry]] explained, "''When it comes to blowing up buildings, models still look far more convincing than CGI, simply because there's so many details to be included in such a sequence. This is why, for the ''Voyager'' Nazi episode, we built a 15-foot miniature building to blow up.''" ({{STC|148}}, p. 49) Numerous building models were sold during the 2006-2008 wave of ''Star Trek'' auctions.
+
As for buildings, generic futuristic-looking building models were often constructed to be positioned in front of a [[matte painting]], to give the scene additional depth on-screen when filmed, as was the case in the [[Mars]] vista scene in {{VOY|Lifesigns}}. Some of those models were featured in the [[TNG Season 2 DVD]] special feature: "Inside Starfleet Archives", and in it, it was discerned that they were usually built with whatever materials were on hand. Other examples were the models of [[Starfleet Headquarters]] ({{DS9|Paradise Lost}}) and the building blown up in {{VOY|The Killing Game, Part II}}. Though well into the CGI age, that building was built because, as [[Dan Curry]] explained, "''When it comes to blowing up buildings, models still look far more convincing than CGI, simply because there's so many details to be included in such a sequence. This is why, for the ''Voyager'' Nazi episode, we built a 15-foot miniature building to blow up.''" ({{STC|148|49}}) Numerous building models were sold during the 2006-2008 wave of ''Star Trek'' auctions.
  +
{| class="wiki-sidebar" style="float:right;"
 
 
|-
[[File:Planet maquette set up for filming at the Westheimer Effects Company.jpg|thumb|left|''Original Series'' planet maquette set up for filming at Westheimer's]]
+
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Planet maquette set up for filming at the Westheimer Effects Company.jpg|180px]]
Planet miniatures were a rarity within the ''Star Trek'' franchise as (full view) planets were traditionally executed either as matte paintings or, from the mid-1990s onward as CGI-effects. They have been used occasionally on ''The Original Series'', most notably by the [[Westheimer Effects Company]] (''[[American Cinematographer]]'', October 1967, p. 716), but rarely afterwards. Yet, those rare instances involved ILM, who used physical studio models to represent celestial bodies, the [[Genesis (planet)|Genesis planet]] in {{film|2}}, and the [[:File:Ray Gilberti with the Moon maquette.jpg|Moon]] and [[Earth]] (night, and day view) models in {{film|3}} being the prime examples.
 
  +
| colspan="1" align="center" |[[File:Earth Studio model prepared by ILM staffer Frank Ordaz.jpg|180px]]
 
|-
  +
| class="even" | <center>''Original Series'' planet maquette set up for filming at Westheimer's</center>
  +
| class="even" | <center>ILM staffer [[Frank Ordaz]] preparing the Earth maquette</center>
  +
|}
 
Planet miniatures were a rarity within the ''Star Trek'' franchise as (full view) planets were traditionally executed either as matte paintings or, from the mid-1990s onward as CGI-effects. They have been used occasionally on ''The Original Series'', most notably by the [[Westheimer Effects Company]] (''[[American Cinematographer]]'', October 1967, p. 716), but rarely afterwards. Still, those rare instances involved ILM, who used physical studio models to represent celestial bodies, the [[Genesis (planet)|Genesis planet]] in {{film|2}}, and the [[:File:Ray Gilberti with the Moon maquette.jpg|Moon]] and [[Earth]] (night, and day view) models in {{film|3}} being the prime examples.
   
[[File:Mordan IV maquette with creators Mike Okuda and Rick Sternbach.jpg|thumb|[[Mordan IV]] cityscape maquette with builders [[Mike Okuda]] and [[Rick Sternbach]]]]
+
[[File:Mordan IV maquette with creators Mike Okuda and Rick Sternbach.jpg|thumb|left|[[Mordan IV]] cityscape maquette with builders [[Mike Okuda]] and [[Rick Sternbach]]]]
 
As far as landscape miniatures were concerned, they were also utilized in the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Though long views were usually executed as matte-painting effects, there were instances where the producers felt that the added three-dimensionality of a model could enhance an intended effect of depth perception. One of the earliest examples was the [[Deneb IV]], or rather [[Farpoint Station]], landscape model for {{TNG|Encounter at Farpoint}}. This maquette was constructed by Greg Jein. Though he is usually associated with his starship studio model builds, landscape miniatures were actually a specialty of his. As a matter of fact, his work on a fairground maquette in the film ''{{w|1941 (film)|1941}}'' won him a "Best Visual Effects Academy Award" nomination. Jein and his company also constructed the landscape miniature of the barren landscape [[Benjamin Sisko|Sisko]] experienced, after entering the [[Bajoran wormhole]], in {{DS9|The Emissary}}. (''[[Movie Magic (TV series)]]'', "Models and Miniatures: A Model of Perfection"&ndash;documentary) To come across believably on-screen, landscape miniatures and (for that matter) the other interior maquette types tend to be quite large, and due to their size, none of these are known to have survived, to date.
 
As far as landscape miniatures were concerned, they were also utilized in the ''Star Trek'' franchise. Though long views were usually executed as matte-painting effects, there were instances where the producers felt that the added three-dimensionality of a model could enhance an intended effect of depth perception. One of the earliest examples was the [[Deneb IV]], or rather [[Farpoint Station]], landscape model for {{TNG|Encounter at Farpoint}}. This maquette was constructed by Greg Jein. Though he is usually associated with his starship studio model builds, landscape miniatures were actually a specialty of his. As a matter of fact, his work on a fairground maquette in the film ''{{w|1941 (film)|1941}}'' won him a "Best Visual Effects Academy Award" nomination. Jein and his company also constructed the landscape miniature of the barren landscape [[Benjamin Sisko|Sisko]] experienced, after entering the [[Bajoran wormhole]], in {{DS9|The Emissary}}. (''[[Movie Magic (TV series)]]'', "Models and Miniatures: A Model of Perfection"&ndash;documentary) To come across believably on-screen, landscape miniatures and (for that matter) the other interior maquette types tend to be quite large, and due to their size, none of these are known to have survived, to date.
   
Line 194: Line 202:
   
 
===Display models===
 
===Display models===
'''Display models''', or simply '''[[model]]s''', are scaled miniatures intended for on-screen use for actors to interact with. Typically, they were most commonly employed as adornments of sets where first unit filming with actors took place. While strictly speaking they confirm to the definition of "studio models", as set dressings, these models were in practice treated and considered as props. Nevertheless, actual filming models as well as study models are known to have fulfilled the role of set dressing such as the [[Class F shuttlecraft model#The physical studio models|Class F shuttlecraft studio model]], the three-foot ''Enterprise'' model, the [[Epsilon IX station#Studio models|Epsilon IX station models]] and the [[Nebula class model#The BoBW kit-bash models|proto-''Nebula''-class]]. However, the by far most utilized display models originated from commercially available model kits, the products from AMT/ERTL in particular.
+
'''Display models''', or simply '''[[model]]s''', are scaled miniatures intended for on-screen use for actors to interact with. Typically, they were most commonly employed as adornments of sets where first unit filming with actors took place. While strictly speaking they confirm to the definition of "studio models", as set dressings, these models were in practice treated and considered as props and therefore understood to be a [[:Category: Special effects companies|special effects]] element. Nevertheless, actual filming models as well as study models are known to have fulfilled the role of set dressing such as the [[Class F shuttlecraft model#The physical studio models|Class F shuttlecraft studio model]], the three-foot ''Enterprise'' model, the [[Epsilon IX station#Studio models|Epsilon IX station models]] and the [[Nebula class model#The BoBW kit-bash models|proto-''Nebula''-class]]. However, the by far most utilized display models originated from commercially available model kits, the products from AMT/ERTL in particular.
   
 
An especially noteworthy category of display models were the models Gregory Jein, Inc. built, originally intended for representation in the ''[[Star Trek Encyclopedia]]'' and ''[[Star Trek Chronology]]'' [[Reference works|reference books]]. Never meant to function as filming models, as they were only intended to fill in gaps in ''Star Trek'' lore to represent ships that were otherwise not seen on-screen in the franchise, and therefore not outfitted with internal lighting, some of these nevertheless showed up on-screen as display models. Examples of these were the [[Daedalus class#Studio model|''Daedalus''-class model]], [[DY-100 class#Physical models|''DY-100''-class display model]] and the [[Bonaventure (C1-21)|''Bonaventure'' (C1-21)]] model.
 
An especially noteworthy category of display models were the models Gregory Jein, Inc. built, originally intended for representation in the ''[[Star Trek Encyclopedia]]'' and ''[[Star Trek Chronology]]'' [[Reference works|reference books]]. Never meant to function as filming models, as they were only intended to fill in gaps in ''Star Trek'' lore to represent ships that were otherwise not seen on-screen in the franchise, and therefore not outfitted with internal lighting, some of these nevertheless showed up on-screen as display models. Examples of these were the [[Daedalus class#Studio model|''Daedalus''-class model]], [[DY-100 class#Physical models|''DY-100''-class display model]] and the [[Bonaventure (C1-21)|''Bonaventure'' (C1-21)]] model.
   
On very rare occasions, such as [[Jonathan Archer]]'s [[Remote controlled model spaceship]], a design was conceived to be a model in the first place. Yet, on at least one occasion, in the case of the [[Constellation class model|''Constellation''-class model]], while the design started out as a display model, it eventually spawned a full-fledged filming model.
+
On very rare occasions, such as the [[Malcorian warp ship]] or [[Jonathan Archer]]'s [[Remote controlled model spaceship]], a design was conceived to be a model in the first place. Yet, on at least one occasion, in the case of the [[Constellation class model|''Constellation''-class model]], while the design started out as a display model, it eventually spawned a full-fledged filming model.
   
 
==Demise of the physical studio model==
 
==Demise of the physical studio model==
As touched upon in the previous sections, the craft of physical studio model building has been increasingly relegated to the fringes in the motion picture business, due to versatility, increased sophistication, and the cost effectiveness of CGI. For the ''Star Trek'' franchise, the years 1997 to 1998 (during which [[DS9 Season 6]], [[VOY Season 4]] and {{film|9}} were produced) marked the completion of the full transition from physical studio model building to CGI studio model building. In 2004, Senior Illustrator and Designer Doug Drexler summarized, "''Having been one of the poor slobs once covered with paint and glue, there is a wonderfulness to actually seeing something that you have created right there in front of you. But it's ultimately not worth it. Physical models fall apart, age poorly and their surfaces are not infinitely and nearly instantly adjustable. To look realistic, they need to be enormous and therefore unwieldly. Their lighting systems break down and are not easily repaired, their electrical systems can short out and often create interference messing up motion control equipment; seriously, the list goes on and on. Finally, miniatures just can't match CGI for visual quality. Even the expensive and gigantic [[Sovereign_class_model#The_physical_studio_model|''Enterprise''-E model]] had problems; in ''First Contact'', I could make out tooling marks on the hull. Meanwhile, in many shots of the large [[Galaxy_class_model#Six-foot_model|''Enterprise''-D model]], you can see the bumps in the paint.''" ({{STC|148}}, p. 51)
+
As touched upon in the previous sections, the craft of physical studio model building has been increasingly relegated to the fringes in the motion picture business, due to versatility, increased sophistication, and the cost effectiveness of CGI. For the ''Star Trek'' franchise, the years 1997 to 1998 (during which [[DS9 Season 6]], [[VOY Season 4]] and {{film|9}} were produced) marked the completion of the full transition from physical studio model building to CGI studio model building. In 2004, Senior Illustrator and Designer Doug Drexler summarized, "''Having been one of the poor slobs once covered with paint and glue, there is a wonderfulness to actually seeing something that you have created right there in front of you. But it's ultimately not worth it. Physical models fall apart, age poorly and their surfaces are not infinitely and nearly instantly adjustable. To look realistic, they need to be enormous and therefore unwieldly. Their lighting systems break down and are not easily repaired, their electrical systems can short out and often create interference messing up motion control equipment; seriously, the list goes on and on. Finally, miniatures just can't match CGI for visual quality. Even the expensive and gigantic [[Sovereign_class_model#The_physical_studio_model|''Enterprise''-E model]] had problems; in ''First Contact'', I could make out tooling marks on the hull. Meanwhile, in many shots of the large [[Galaxy_class_model#Six-foot_model|''Enterprise''-D model]], you can see the bumps in the paint.''" ({{STC|148|51}})
   
 
While there is no denying the arguments stated by Drexler, ''Star Trek'' visual effects staff members, born and bred with the traditional methods, have met the introduction of the new technology with mixed feelings, as numerous production staffers have commented upon, some of them expressing their own motivations:
 
While there is no denying the arguments stated by Drexler, ''Star Trek'' visual effects staff members, born and bred with the traditional methods, have met the introduction of the new technology with mixed feelings, as numerous production staffers have commented upon, some of them expressing their own motivations:
Line 207: Line 215:
 
*Greg Jein (Model Maker) in 1996:<blockquote>"Photography didn't kill art, like portrait painting or illustration; and similarly, I'm sure there will always be a need for models. Right now there are some things that CGI can't do, but given enough time and money, they will accomplish, say, explosions, and things like that. It's a question Dave Allen and I were talking about. Stop-motion animators are running out of business, too. That has happened very fast, but I'm more into the tactile thing, so I'd rather be playing with goo than punching a keyboard. It's amazing, some of the stuff that came out this past year. My [[God]], If they go the way they've been going, then CGI will become both economical and a mainstay of television production, especially. In feature production they still have a way to go. As far as miniatures are concerned, I'll remain optimistic for the time being." (''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D Blueprints]]'', booklet, pp. 14-15)</blockquote>
 
*Greg Jein (Model Maker) in 1996:<blockquote>"Photography didn't kill art, like portrait painting or illustration; and similarly, I'm sure there will always be a need for models. Right now there are some things that CGI can't do, but given enough time and money, they will accomplish, say, explosions, and things like that. It's a question Dave Allen and I were talking about. Stop-motion animators are running out of business, too. That has happened very fast, but I'm more into the tactile thing, so I'd rather be playing with goo than punching a keyboard. It's amazing, some of the stuff that came out this past year. My [[God]], If they go the way they've been going, then CGI will become both economical and a mainstay of television production, especially. In feature production they still have a way to go. As far as miniatures are concerned, I'll remain optimistic for the time being." (''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D Blueprints]]'', booklet, pp. 14-15)</blockquote>
 
*[[David Merriman, Jr.]] (Model Maker) in 1996:<blockquote>"Now, as CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) matures as a viable alternative to effects model shots, I would be surprised if I got any future work. Not because the model building jobs in the industry aren't out there. It's just that I'm not that hungry for them anymore. I've had my fling, and today ask too much money for my work. I like CGI! CGI will become the agent of a situation that I have long hoped to see come about: the elimination of actors! Specifically, politically active actors: all too often assuming the airs of royalty and spoilt children. I look to the day when the word "Hollywood Celebrity" will describe pimple-faced computer geek wearing a pocket-protector, seated in front of a ''Silicon Graphics'' display, digitizing scantily clad Jane Fonda look-alikes. CGI is good!" (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 30, 1998, p. 42)</blockquote>
 
*[[David Merriman, Jr.]] (Model Maker) in 1996:<blockquote>"Now, as CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) matures as a viable alternative to effects model shots, I would be surprised if I got any future work. Not because the model building jobs in the industry aren't out there. It's just that I'm not that hungry for them anymore. I've had my fling, and today ask too much money for my work. I like CGI! CGI will become the agent of a situation that I have long hoped to see come about: the elimination of actors! Specifically, politically active actors: all too often assuming the airs of royalty and spoilt children. I look to the day when the word "Hollywood Celebrity" will describe pimple-faced computer geek wearing a pocket-protector, seated in front of a ''Silicon Graphics'' display, digitizing scantily clad Jane Fonda look-alikes. CGI is good!" (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 30, 1998, p. 42)</blockquote>
*[[John Grower]] (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 1999:<blockquote>"The whole nature of doing the ships in CG was something that really hadn't been done before up close...That took up a lot of development. I think we pushed it as far as we could in the amount of time we had [remark: for {{film|9}}], and were pretty successful. I think it harkens a new age, in that the next time we do it it'll be even better. We're just now starting to evolve towards being able to mix and match CG and miniatures(...)obviously miniatures have their place and will be used, but just knowing that you can do the CG just opens up a lot of creative freedom." ({{STC|121}}, p. 58)</blockquote>
+
*[[John Grower]] (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 1999:<blockquote>"The whole nature of doing the ships in CG was something that really hadn't been done before up close...That took up a lot of development. I think we pushed it as far as we could in the amount of time we had [remark: for {{film|9}}], and were pretty successful. I think it harkens a new age, in that the next time we do it it'll be even better. We're just now starting to evolve towards being able to mix and match CG and miniatures(...)obviously miniatures have their place and will be used, but just knowing that you can do the CG just opens up a lot of creative freedom." ({{STC|121|58}})</blockquote>
*[[Rick Sternbach]] (Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant) in 1999:<blockquote>"Certainly for television CGI is very cost effective, and for many effects in features, CGI can accomplish what models cannot. I would think that miniatures will likely be around for some time, since even the latest ''USS Enterprise NCC-1701-E'' for '''First Contact''' was a ten-foot long model build by ''ILM'', and extensive use of miniatures highlighted the miniseries {{w|From the Earth to the Moon}}. Cost considerations and visual effects aside, there is something immensely satisfying in seeing one's five-view drawings come to life as a real, three-dimensional object to ogle at and admire the workmanship, and to point to all the neat fiddly bits and wonder, "Hmmm...what if I put a ''Type XI phaser emitter'' over here and that'll leave room for a ''quantum microtorpedo launcher'' over there..."." (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 36, April 1999, p. 34)</blockquote>
+
*[[Rick Sternbach]] (Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant) in 1999:<blockquote>"Certainly for television CGI is very cost effective, and for many effects in features, CGI can accomplish what models cannot. I would think that miniatures will likely be around for some time, since even the latest ''USS Enterprise NCC-1701-E'' for '''First Contact''' was a ten-foot long model build by ''ILM'', and extensive use of miniatures highlighted the miniseries ''{{w|From the Earth to the Moon}}''. Cost considerations and visual effects aside, there is something immensely satisfying in seeing one's five-view drawings come to life as a real, three-dimensional object to ogle at and admire the workmanship, and to point to all the neat fiddly bits and wonder, "Hmmm...what if I put a ''Type XI phaser emitter'' over here and that'll leave room for a ''quantum microtorpedo launcher'' over there..."." (''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 36, April 1999, p. 34)</blockquote>
*[[Alex Jaeger]] (Visual Effects Art Director) in 2004:<blockquote>"When you build a practical model, you have reality working for you. You don't have to worry whether it is going to look real or not, because it will as long as you put enough details on it." ({{STC|148}}, p. 51)</blockquote>
+
*[[Alex Jaeger]] (Visual Effects Art Director) in 2004:<blockquote>"When you build a practical model, you have reality working for you. You don't have to worry whether it is going to look real or not, because it will as long as you put enough details on it." ({{STC|148|51}})</blockquote>
*[[John Eaves]] (Senior Illustrator) in 2004:<blockquote>"There is a place for both. CGI takes all the hard edges off and blends the VFX elements together flawlessly. But models still have a look and weight that CGI doesn't [....] Models will always have a place in my heart." ({{STC|148}}, p. 51)</blockquote>
+
*[[John Eaves]] (Senior Illustrator) in 2004:<blockquote>"There is a place for both. CGI takes all the hard edges off and blends the VFX elements together flawlessly. But models still have a look and weight that CGI doesn't [....] Models will always have a place in my heart." ({{STC|148|51}}}</blockquote>
 
*Doug Drexler (Production Illustrator) in 2009:<blockquote>"Many people say they can always spot a CG model...that's except when they didn't! And they don't know they didn't! I guarantee that plenty of stuff has passed right by...usually real world stuff, because you aren't expecting it. I love physical models too, but CGI is better, not because it is easier (...and who says it's easier? You couldn't prove it by my life!) but because of how much more we can get out of it. The truth is that you could never detail a miniature as finely as a CG model. Maybe once upon a time, but not any more. We can fly a squadron of fully detailed vipers, with complete cockpit...animations playing on their monitors, characters in spacesuits flying them, with right into the fully detailed flight pod of the hugely gigantic BSG model, where there are people walking around...vehicles driving… and everything is fully lit, self and otherwise. Never happen in the physical miniature realm.(...) How many of the far out aliens in the new Trek film are makeup? There was a day, not long ago, when it all would have been makeup. I think miniatures will still be around for at least the next two decades, but their use will continue to dwindle. The same thing is going to happen to set construction, but to a lesser degree. same with stunt work. Eventually the audience will be computer generated as well...only kidding. But this is true: We did a pilot for a show where half the sets were virtual, and you wouldn't know." {{DrexFiles|2009/05/10/voyager-details-by-starlight/#comment-8740}}</blockquote>
 
*Doug Drexler (Production Illustrator) in 2009:<blockquote>"Many people say they can always spot a CG model...that's except when they didn't! And they don't know they didn't! I guarantee that plenty of stuff has passed right by...usually real world stuff, because you aren't expecting it. I love physical models too, but CGI is better, not because it is easier (...and who says it's easier? You couldn't prove it by my life!) but because of how much more we can get out of it. The truth is that you could never detail a miniature as finely as a CG model. Maybe once upon a time, but not any more. We can fly a squadron of fully detailed vipers, with complete cockpit...animations playing on their monitors, characters in spacesuits flying them, with right into the fully detailed flight pod of the hugely gigantic BSG model, where there are people walking around...vehicles driving… and everything is fully lit, self and otherwise. Never happen in the physical miniature realm.(...) How many of the far out aliens in the new Trek film are makeup? There was a day, not long ago, when it all would have been makeup. I think miniatures will still be around for at least the next two decades, but their use will continue to dwindle. The same thing is going to happen to set construction, but to a lesser degree. same with stunt work. Eventually the audience will be computer generated as well...only kidding. But this is true: We did a pilot for a show where half the sets were virtual, and you wouldn't know." {{DrexFiles|2009/05/10/voyager-details-by-starlight/#comment-8740}}</blockquote>
*[[Paul Olsen]] (Model Painter) in 2012:<blockquote>"I was surprised that more than a few people asked about models and wished the films would drop CGI for models and build proper models…quite a number of people who made it a point that they liked CGI for effects, but would prefer seeing something ‘real’ when it came to models. Are you listening, Paramount? Richard, Jim, we might work together again yet!" (''[[Star Trek: Creating the Enterprise]]'', p. 88)</blockquote>
+
*[[Paul Olsen]] (Model Painter) in 2012:<blockquote>"I was surprised that more than a few people asked about models and wished the films would drop CGI for models and build proper models…quite a number of people who made it a point that they liked CGI for effects, but would prefer seeing something ‘real’ when it came to models. Are you listening, Paramount? [[Richard Taylor|Richard]], [[Jim Dow|Jim]], we might work together again yet!" (''[[Star Trek: Creating the Enterprise]]'', p. 88)</blockquote>
 
*[[Ronald B. Moore]] (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 2012:<blockquote>"One thing about a physical model is that it shows wear. Every time you use it there is a little less shine or a little more damage. We would try to keep them in good shape but they got handled a lot. A computer model is just the opposite. It seems like the models get worked on continuously. A little change here, a little improvement there. Perhaps we want to get really close to a section in shot? That area gets improved. For the most part every time you use the model it gets a little better." (''[[Flying Starships]]'', pp. 33-34)</blockquote>
 
*[[Ronald B. Moore]] (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 2012:<blockquote>"One thing about a physical model is that it shows wear. Every time you use it there is a little less shine or a little more damage. We would try to keep them in good shape but they got handled a lot. A computer model is just the opposite. It seems like the models get worked on continuously. A little change here, a little improvement there. Perhaps we want to get really close to a section in shot? That area gets improved. For the most part every time you use the model it gets a little better." (''[[Flying Starships]]'', pp. 33-34)</blockquote>
The hopes of the production staffers that physical models would somehow remain in a niche capacity notwithstanding, by 2010, the craft had all but disappeared from the motion picture and television industry, though it has remained in frequent existence for the fabrication of display models for museums, corporations, defense contractors, and the like. In addition, the sudden onslaught of CGI from 1993 onward, caught quite a few (traditional) visual effects houses, with a heavy physical studio model emphasis, unawares. While ILM was a pioneering company in the new technique and thus making the transition gracefully, [[Image G]] for example, nearly folded, but managed to cope with the transition eventually, with another well known effects house of the time, [[Boss Film Studios]], being caught off guard and forced to close its doors.
+
The hopes of the production staffers that physical models would somehow remain in a niche capacity notwithstanding, by 2010, the craft had all but disappeared from the motion picture and television industry for filming purposes, though it has remained in existence for the fabrication of display models for institutions such as museums, corporations, defense contractors, and even for motion picture productions when the need for one is perceived. In addition, the sudden onslaught of CGI from 1993 onward, caught quite a few (traditional) visual effects houses, with a heavy physical studio model emphasis, unawares. While ILM was a pioneering company in the new technique and thus making the transition gracefully, [[Image G]] for example, nearly folded, but managed to cope with the transition eventually, with another well known effects house of the time, [[Boss Film Studios]], being caught off guard and forced to close its doors.
   
==Further reading==
+
==Appendices==
  +
===Further reading===
 
*''[[Industrial Light & Magic: The Art of Special Effects]]'', Chapter 3: "Model Construction", pp. 41-63, 1986
 
*''[[Industrial Light & Magic: The Art of Special Effects]]'', Chapter 3: "Model Construction", pp. 41-63, 1986
 
*"The Making of the [[Studio_models_(TNG)#Galor_class|Cardassian Warship]]", [[Ed Miarecki]], ''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 16, December 1996, pp. 24-27
 
*"The Making of the [[Studio_models_(TNG)#Galor_class|Cardassian Warship]]", [[Ed Miarecki]], ''[[Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models]]'', issue 16, December 1996, pp. 24-27
Line 225: Line 234:
 
*''[[Flying Starships]]'', Chapter 4: "Flying Starships", pp. 29-41, 2012
 
*''[[Flying Starships]]'', Chapter 4: "Flying Starships", pp. 29-41, 2012
   
==Documentaries==
+
===[[Star Trek documentaries|Documentaries and specials]]===
* "''Space Docks and Birds of Prey''"&ndash;special, {{DVD|Star Trek III: The Search for Spock|Special Edition|-Special Edition DVD}}, disc 2
+
* {{DVD|Star Trek III: The Search for Spock|Special Edition|(Special Edition) DVD}}-special feature, "Space Docks and Birds of Prey"
  +
* [[VOY Season 1 DVD]]-special feature, "Red Alert: Visual Effects Season One"
*"''Models and Miniatures: A Model of Perfection''", [[Movie Magic (TV series)]], Season 1, Episode 11, 1995 &ndash; Documentary
 
  +
* ''[[Movie Magic (TV series)]]'', Season 1, Episode 11, "Models and Miniatures: A Model of Perfection" (1995)
* ''[[Sense of Scale]]'', 2012
+
* ''[[Sense of Scale]]'' (2012)
  +
* ''[[FanAddicts!]]'', Season 1, Episode 3, "Star Trek" (2013)
   
==See also==
+
===See also===
 
* [[Model]], the in-universe definition of a model
 
* [[Model]], the in-universe definition of a model
 
* [[Star Trek model kits|''Star Trek'' model kits]]
 
* [[Star Trek model kits|''Star Trek'' model kits]]
Line 238: Line 249:
 
* [[:Category:Art department|List of studio model/prop designers and builders]]
 
* [[:Category:Art department|List of studio model/prop designers and builders]]
   
==External link==
+
===External link===
 
*[http://www.creativeplanetnetwork.com/dcp/news/miniatures-digital-world/44211 July 2001 ''Millimeter Magazine'' on-line article, "Miniatures In a Digital World"] at [http://www.creativeplanetnetwork.com/ creativePLANETnetwork.com]
 
*[http://www.creativeplanetnetwork.com/dcp/news/miniatures-digital-world/44211 July 2001 ''Millimeter Magazine'' on-line article, "Miniatures In a Digital World"] at [http://www.creativeplanetnetwork.com/ creativePLANETnetwork.com]
   
[[de:Liste von wiederverwendeten Schiffsmodellen]]
 
[[it:Modello scenico]]
 
 
[[Category:Studio models| 1]]
 
[[Category:Studio models| 1]]
  +
 
[[de:Liste wiederverwendeten Materials]]
 
[[it:Modello scenico]]

Revision as of 01:49, 15 October 2014

Template:Realworld

For the interactive in-universe use of scaled miniatures, please see Model. For model kits, please see Star Trek model kits.

A studio model (or filming model, as it is also referred to) is a type of scale miniature used in the Star Trek live-action television series and Star Trek films to represent various (inanimate) objects, craft or ships. Strictly speaking, the term is applicable to all the types hereafter mentioned. As production asset, a studio model is currently understood to be a visual effects element.

Filming model

DY-100 and USS Enterprise studio models filmed at Film Effects of Hollywood

"Hero" (USS Enterprise), and "Guest" model (Botany Bay) on stage at Film Effects of Hollywood

In practice, both expressions "studio model" and "filming model" (the latter of which is more applicable to this case) have been habitually reserved to indicate those miniatures that served as the primary models used for second-unit filming in productions. As far as repetitive productions were concerned, a further distinction was sometimes made in:

  • "Hero" models – intended for regular use – represented the best miniatures, used for beauty shots and close angles. These were typically the largest, most detailed and best-made models.
  • "Guest" models – intended for unique or irregular use – were often made more simply and cheaply. In many cases, they were repainted or modified for reuse as other objects in later episodes. These models, when they concerned starships, were sometimes referred to by visual effects staffers, among others Adam "Mojo" Lebowitz of Foundation Imaging, by the expression Ship-of-the-Week. (Star Trek: The Magazine Volume 1, Issue 6, p. 51)

In some cases, footage of a model was reused as a stock element, and simply referred to as a different ship. Time and cost considerations were the primary reason for such reuse. According to model maker Gregory Jein (in an interview appearing in TNG Season 3 DVD-special features), the art, and visual effects departments typically had three to four weeks to design and create each model, during the run of a series – sometimes less time. It should be noted that on these occasions, detailing and finishing quality of the filming models would rarely have gotten the seal of approval of professional model makers of, for example, display models for museums. Professional modeler Jason Eaton, who restored the McKinley-type studio model for the auction winner of the model, has noted in this respect, "(...)it NEVER ceases to shock me how rough some of these models are, under close scrutiny. I know they're made under impossible deadlines, but man, some of those seam lines and bubbles in the castings made me cringe, when I left things untouched... you have to match what you're making to what exists!!" [1] The practical reason for this was that in the pre-High Definition television age, a high level of quality detailing would have taken up more time, and thus more money, and was not necessary anyway, as possible shortcomings would not have been discernible on-screen. Model and prop maker Ed Miarecki, formerly of Science Fiction Modelmaking Associates and Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), has even put it more crassly when he stated, "These models were never meant to last. They were only designed for one thing, then they become dumpster fodder." (FanAddicts!, Season 1, Episode 3: Star Trek) The build of a (hero) model during the pre-production stage of a television series (due to the larger amount of expected close-ups), or a model for a movie (due to the greater demands made of the model for big screen requirements), was a different story altogether, typically taking up considerably more time. The six-foot USS Enterprise-D model for example, took three months to build, discounting the design stage, whereas the movie Enterprise took a whopping 14 months to complete from start to finish. (The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, p. 207)

Although the term "studio model" traditionally has been used to refer to physical miniatures, the advent of Computer Generated Imaging (CGI for short) in the 1990s (most notably thanks to the series Babylon 5), meant that the definition had to be expanded to include CGI models as well

Building a physical filming model

There were basically two methods of building used in the movie industry of constructing filming miniatures and both have been used in the Star Trek franchise:

  • Classical build-up method: This has been the most common way of building a studio model and has been used in the industry from its very inception, right up to the advent of CGI. Essentially, it is almost the same method as someone building a commercial model kit, starting from the inside, applying parts and details as one goes along. Traditionally, wood has been the material of choice and has been used well into the 1960s. Models could be made out of massive wood (such as the three-foot Enterprise and the D7-Class) or, if internal lighting was required, the wood was hollowed out (for instance, in the case of the secondary hull, bridge and nacelles of the eleven-foot Enterprise). New materials like plastics and fiberglass became available in the 1960s and 1970s and largely replaced wood as the premiere construction material, because they became cheaper, easier and faster to work with. Vacuum-formed parts typically were applied to an armature framework (needed for internal strength and often as a mounting point for filming), resulting in models that were lighter than if they were made out of wood. The saucer section of the eleven-foot Enterprise was the first piece constructed this way and the movie Enterprise was a complete build around an armature. Apart from producing custom-made vacuum-formed parts, parts from any and all commercially available model kits could also be applied to construct a studio model (for example, the long range shuttle and the original Borg cube). This method of building resulted in a one-of-a-kind model and has been used to produce the models for TOS and the Star Trek films.
Vacuum forming is one of the oldest methods of molding organic polymers, with widespread use since the development of modern plastics. A negative mold is produced, in which heated plastic is poured. The air between the plastic and mold is sucked out to achieve a perfect fit. Once the plastic has cooled, the part, called a cast, is removed from the mold. Contrary to the model kit industry, which uses very expensive metal molds, model makers in the movie industry normally make their molds out of cheap, baked clay, since the part needed is often a one-off. An additional advantage is that details such as grid-lines can be inscribed before the mold is baked. The mold is often destroyed when the cast is removed from it.
Chronicle of a filming model build at ILM using the Master-Mold-Cast method
Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build full-scale plans studied by Bill Concannom and Ease Owyeung Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build aluminum armature Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master with station points USS Enterprise-D studio model master Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build primary hull master with station points filled with foam
Concannom (l) and Owyeung studying the 1:1 plans
Aluminum armature for the saucer section
Secondary hull master with plexiglass station points (ribs)
Seeds filling in the ribs of the secondary hull master with high density polyfoam
Primary hull master filled with foam before sanding down
Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with station points filled with clay and sanded down Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Howie Weed Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master primary hull details applied Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull details applied by Gregory Jein, Howie Weed, and Bill George Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build master secondary hull with coated with bondo before sanded down
Secondary hull master filled with clay and sculpted down to station points
Secondary hull master detailed with masking tape by Weed
Detailing the primary hull master with masking tape
Jein, Weed and George inscribing details onto the master of the secondary hull
Secondary hull master in stabilizing intermediate stage coated with Bondo before sanded down
USS Enterprise-D studio model mold and cast Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by Ease Owyeung Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull detailed by pre-painting masking tape Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with neon lighting added Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast primary hull with arrmature installed
Casey and Owyeung pulling off a mold from the transparent cast of the primary hull
Owyeung detailing the cast of the top primary hull
Cast (top half) primary hull applied with pre-painting masking tape
Cast (top half) primary hull endowed with neon lighting
Primary hull cast with armature installed
Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull assembled by Bill Concannom Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build complete assembled cast primary hull given primary coat of paint by Bill George Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build nearly completed primary hull finetuned by Bill George Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Bill George Galaxy class USS Enterprise-D studio model build cast secondary hull almost completed finetuned by Ease Owyeung
Concannom assembles the secondary hull casts
George giving the assembled primary hull its first primer paint coat
George finetuning the nearly complete primary hull
Almost completed secondary hull finetuned by George
...as it is by Owyeung
Galaxy-class USS Enterprise-1701-D
  • Master-Mold-Cast method: This method became viable when newer composite materials started to become economically available in the late 1970s, early 1980s (not without its risks, as several model makers would die from the then not understood chemical side-effects from working with these materials, as attested to by several colleagues in 2011 (Sense of Scale, disc 1). The first stage using this method was the production of a master, sometimes also referred to as a template or as a pattern. The master was a solid rudimentary (part of the) model, typically made out of Styrofoam, clay or a combination thereof. It was then used to produce a negative mold. Contrary to the molds normally used to produce vacuum-formed parts, this mold was made out of a flexible material, like silicone rubber. Into this mold, heated material such as acrylic plastic, resin or fiberglass was poured, resulting – after cooling off – in a positive cast. These cast were then assembled, often around an aluminum armature, into a complete model. At first glance, this seemed like a more elaborate method of building a studio model, but there were distinct advantages compared to the classical method of build-up.
    • In some cases, detailing of the model could be sped up. Whereas detailing on a classical build-up could be time-consuming, detailing on a master could be quick and dirty, using everyday items like masking tape, pins, paper clips and such. If clay was used, details could be carved in. Either way, the details would be permanently imprinted onto the mold. In the case of the six-foot USS Enterprise-D model, which (together with the two-feet model) was among the first Star Trek models to be produced this way, a translucent material was used to produce the casts. The parts were painted and, where lighted windows were supposed to be, the paint was merely scraped away (or, if used, masking tape was removed after painting) to allow the internal lighting to shine through, a vastly time-saving method compared to drilling out holes, normally used up until then, when constructing a model the classic way.
    • A major advantage of this method, which was more of an issue in television productions (due to its repetitive nature), was reproducibility. Since the molds were made out of a flexible material, they could be easily and more importantly undamaged, removed from the casts and used over and over again. As the masters were usually too damaged after use, they were normally discarded but it was the molds that were to become the working capital of the model maker. They could be used to quickly produce copies and replacement parts to various ends. For example, the molds of the two-foot Enterprise-D and Enterprise-C were used to produce the Niagara-class and Freedom-class; the molds of the four-foot Enterprise-D were used to construct parts for the Nebula-class studio model, a break-away model for "Cause and Effect" and a limited, commercially available production-run of twelve for the Viacom Entertainment Store, as were the molds for the D'deridex-class, also serving for the construction of a second studio model.
The first known model-maker who employed an early variant of the method for the Star Trek franchise was Brick Price Movie Miniatures, in constructing the abandoned Phase II Enterprise model. Price retained the molds of the model when he was pulled from the project in 1978 and has used them since, to produce several display models for the Planet Hollywood restaurant franchise in the 1990s. This method of constructing a studio model has been the method of choice of Gregory Jein and Tony Meininger, and the vast majority of models for televised Star Trek (beginning with TNG) were constructed this way. It was possible to retro-apply the method to existing models, using them as master. Molds were taken from the original D7 model for Star Trek: Phase II and from the USS Grissom model to produce the SS Vico. However, there was a realistic chance to damage the original models (it is conceivable that the repaint performed on the D7 model in 1977 was done to repair damage when the mold was removed).

Costs of building a physical filming model

Usually, Hollywood production companies are loathe to publicly divulge details on costs of productions. While aggregates are often published, details such as specific costs of, for example, studio models are not. The Star Trek franchise therein is no exception. Yet, over the years, some figures of studio model construction costs have come to light and, as happenstance had it, of arguably the three most signature vessels of the franchise, coincidentally spanning a period of twenty years plus, providing some insight into the development of technique advancement and the differences between a model for television productions or feature productions.

What does it cost to construct a physical filming model for Star Trek ?
Model Year of construction Cost in dollars 1965 adjusted[1] costs 1978 adjusted costs 1987 adjusted costs 2006[2]
adjusted costs
2010 adjusted costs Notes
USS Enterprise 19641965 >$6,600[3] $6,600 >$13,137 >$23,375 >$41,631 >$46,125 Total costs, incl. construction and modifications, for both the three-, and eleven foot models.
refit – USS Enterprise 1978 $150,000[4] $75,362 $150,000 $266,908 $475,362
Sold for:
$240,000
$521,616 Unclear if the costs for the abandoned Phase II model are included.[5]
USS Enterprise-D 1987 $75,000[6] $21,177 $42,192 $75,000 $133,575
Sold for:
$500,000
$146,572 Aggregated costs for both the two- and six feet studio models
  1. Dollar Times Inflation Calculator
  2. Year of the studio's assets sale in the 40 Years of Star Trek: The Collection auction
  3. Star Trek: Communicator issue 132, 2001, pp. 51, 53
  4. The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, p. 207
  5. The reference book Star Trek Phase II: The Lost Series, p. 75, strongly indicated it to be the case; As far as the several sets in their various states of completion were concerned, this actually made business sense as they were, albeit with additional redesigns, yet used for The Motion Picture, whereas the Phase II studio models were all discarded.
  6. Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion, 3rd ed., p.12

Traditionally, studios, those of he Star Trek franchise included, have habitually balked at the cost incurred by the construction of physical studio models, perceived as (too) high since it was labor intensive manual work. As repartee to this, Matthew Grazner of Hunter/Grazner Industries, responsible for the construction of break-away models for the Son'a collector model, decided upon at the eleventh hour, has dryly postulated, "I always say that visual effects are not expensive – it is the lack of decision making regarding visual effects that is expensive." (Cinefex, issue 77, p. 92) Grazner did have a point in his assessment, as the history of the Star Trek franchise is rife with examples of this, the construction, apart from Grazner's Son'a break-away models, of the eight-foot movie Enterprise model being a prime example.

Building a CGI filming model

In a remark, reminiscent of the one that Jein made in regard to physicals studio models, John Gross of Eden FX, stated that it took on average two- to four weeks to construct a new CGI studio model for an ongoing Star Trek television production. [2] For further information,

Studio model types other than filming models

Aside from the filming models that were primarily used for the actual filming of a production, there were several other types of studio models in use in the industry, constructed on occasion to specific ends.

Study model

USS Excelsior study model by Nilo Rodis as USS Alka-Selsior

Excelsior-class study model, a direction not taken...

USS Alka-Selsior

...yet still showing up on screen

A study model or concept model, as it is also sometimes referred to, is behind-the-scenes nomenclature for a rough miniature built to study how a particular design might look in three dimensions and will normally lead up to the full-fledged studio models. Study models could be extremely crude, sometimes made of illustration or foam core board, or sometimes cobbled together from found objects, or sculpted from foam or other substances. Often crudely detailed, they were not meant to be used in actual productions, but to evaluate a design from all angles, before moving forward with or scrapping the design. However, they could be detailed enough for them to occasionally end up on camera when a need arose in a pinch of having them appear in the background of a shot where their limitations would not be apparent, such as the proto-Nebula-class and the various proto-Excelsiors. The earliest Star Trek study model, was the four-inch balsa wooden evaluation model of the Enterprise, Matt Jefferies constructed in 1964 for the NBC executives to mull over. (Star Trek: The Magazine Volume 1, Issue 10, p. 26)

Federation Holoship study model

Scanning model of the Federation Holoship

Even in the CGI age, study models are occasionally constructed as a visual aid for designers and programmers and/or as a scanning model for digitizing. Examples were the study model built for Star Trek: First Contact of the T'Plana-Hath and the Federation holoship model and Son'a collector for Star Trek: Insurrection. Daren Dochterman elaborated in this respect, "Physical models are often built even when the final product will be CG...in some cases, it's to show producers and others the item in question in a real world context because sometimes a picture on a screen just doesn't make an impact like a real life item does... and on other occasions, it's done to give an in-house model crew something to do to justify billing the production company for it... and to maintain its existence. I'm not saying that was the case here, as I really just don't know... but when I was on The Chronicles of Riddick, we had an in-house model crew led by the great Greg Jein building models of all the ships that we were designing for 3d... the impact of having them in real life was very inspiring for both the crew, and the studio head...." [3] Jim Key added, when he wrote up an article on the making of Insurrection, "I was equally comforted by another comment that both Jim Rygiel and Carlyle Livingston made to me–essentially how they both strive to have maquettes built for pre-visualization, and the importance of study models and/or scanning models. Though many times now the finished form may be in CG, these physical representations still serve their purpose when seeking approvals, since they hide nothing and reveal nook and cranny." (Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models, issue 34, p. 31) As to underscore Key's comment, it was only when the producers were presented with the scanning model of the "Federation Holoship", that a design flaw was detected.

Kit-bash

USS Curry

The heavily kit-bashed model, USS Curry

The term "kit-bash" is a behind-the-scenes term used to describe a ship, station or any other model, created by the production staff from already existing parts of other ship, and station studio models, additional model kits (not necessarily Star Trek-related), and/or any and all items at hand during the time of building, deemed appropriate for application. On occasion the related term "kludge" was also used to designate such builds. Star Trek Scenic Artist Anthony Fredickson was considered especially adept in the technique of kit-bashing by his colleagues, as they have endowed him with the nickname "King of Kludge" [4](X) Kit-bashing has been a common method for creating filming models in the science fiction genre, such as in the movie Alien, where they served as the hero models.

An early example of kit-bashing in Star Trek is the Aurora in "The Way to Eden", which was the reuse of one of the two Tholian starship models, featured in "The Tholian Web", complete with Constitution class nacelles and D7-class pylons, they originating from their respective AMT Star Trek model kits (No's S951 and S952). In later incarnations of Star Trek, however, kit-bash models served primarily as (deep) background elements, the method lending itself for quick and cheap assembly when additional elements were required in a very short time.

The vast majority of ships seen in the aftermath of Battle of Wolf 359, in The Next Generation's two-part episodes "The Best of Both Worlds, Part II", and at the Surplus Depot Z15, in "Unification I", were kit-bashes. Among the Federation classes shown there that are designated 'kit-bashes' were the New Orleans-class, Springfield-class, Cheyenne-class and the proto-Nebula, using parts from various model kits, whereas the Freedom-class and Niagara-class were kit-bashed from parts derived from Gregory Jein, Inc.'s own, already existing production assets. Several other kit-bashes were also built for several Deep Space Nine episodes, most notably "A Time to Stand" (including the Centaur-type, Curry-type and Yeager-type), again using parts from model kits.

Kit-bashing has also expanded to CGI. Examples of CGI kit-bashes were the Intrepid-type and Nebula-class, which were constructed out of existing parts of the CGI-NX-class and CGI-Galaxy-class respectively. In addition to designs seen on screen, non-canon Star Trek games featured kit-bashed designs.

Breakaway model

Destroying the Saratoga

Preparing one of the breakaway models of the USS Saratoga for destruction

A breakaway model is a model specifically built for on-screen destruction. Models of this kind were typically built for destruction scenes, when it was felt that a convincing destruction could not be achieved through various procedures in post-production, like matting stock footage of explosions over shots of studio models, and when it was deemed that the master models were too valuable for destruction. Normally built at a smaller scale with lighter materials and constructed in such a way through pre-scoring or pre-cutting, that debris would fly off easily, these models were packed with pyrotechnics to be detonated at the directors will. Normal procedure was that those models were suspended from the ceiling and that shots of them were taken by a high-speed camera directly underneath, to emulate normal dispersion of explosions, when the shot footage was played back at at lower frame rate. Typically, several models were made, in order to have the best shot possible. Break-away models for Star Trek included the Miranda-class (DS9: "Emissary"), the Galaxy-class ("Cause and Effect") and both versions of the Borg cube ("The Best of Both Worlds, Part II" and First Contact).

Advances in CGI have made breakaway models increasingly obsolete.

Camera test model

Typical camera test model Apollo class

A typical foam-core camera test model (Apollo class in this case)

Glenn Neufield and David Takemura setting up a VFX shot

Neufeld (l) and David Takemura setting up a shot for the DS-9 station model with camera test models

A camera test model, also known as a pre-visualization model, is a model usually made out of cheap material like paper, cardboard, wood or Styrofoam in particular, loosely modeled after existing studio models. Detailing varied from very crude to moderate, since they were never intended to appear on-screen. They were typically used by visual effects coordinators/supervisors and camera teams as visual aids to set up camera shots in pre-production planning before final shooting. Advantages using test models were that the production staff did not have to handle the usually heavier filming models, or as Doug Drexler once jokingly put it, "You only pulled out the big models once you pretty much knew what you needed" [5](X), and that wear and tear to those models was reduced. Most of the Star Trek filming models had one or more test model counterparts. Licensed, commercially available models and model kits were known to have fulfilled this role, as well. (Star Trek: Communicator issue 148, p. 48) Examples of these were the AMT Star Trek model kits of the Danube-class, two of which being sold at auction.[6] [7]

Too rudimentary to serve as filming models, camera test models have nevertheless been on at least one occasion used as such. Though the technique had already been firmly established by the time Glenn Neufeld was brought aboard the franchise as visual effects supervisor during the latter half of Deep Space Nine's first season, it was Neufeld in particular who embraced the technique and it was he who took the very unusual step of using them as filming models when the production of the second season episode "Sanctuary" came up. The episode featured a huge fleet of Skrreean refugee ships arriving at Deep Space 9, and Neufeld realized there was no practical way to have each ship individually shot and edited in post-production. He recalled, "We had to to create all the ships they arrive in. The script read "There are more than ships at the station than we have ever seen before, a ship in every docking port and hundreds more lined up waiting to dock." As soon as you read something like that, you know you're in for a lot of late nights. We called in our foam fleet. We put them on C-stands, arranged them and shot them six to ten at a time. We'd made marks on the monitor to show where they were, then we'd rearrange them, move the camera further back to make them smaller and shoot them again. When we were finally finished we had this yellow brick road of ships going off in the distance." How unusual his approach was at the time, was realized by him when he got a call from post-production editing, "They told me the negative was covered in scratches, and I thought, my goodness, my shot's been ruined. It turned out to be the background ships. Some of them were so small that the people at the lab thought they were dirt." (Cinefantastique, Vol 25 #6/Vol 26 #1, p. 100)

File:Constitution class refit landingbay camera test model.jpg

Animatics of the Guido-II and Enterprise shuttlebay in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

Sovereign class Captain's Yacht Cousteau animatics deployment sequence

CGI animatics of the Cousteau deployment in Star Trek: Insurrection

A very closely related use of these models, was their use in the so-called "animatics". Animatics was a behind-the-scenes term used to denominate short clippings of footage especially shot at the behest of directors and/or visual effects supervisors for evaluation purposes. This footage was normally shot for ascertaining if storyboarded sequences, typically visual effects scenes, came across on-screen as intended. As this footage was essentially only intended for evaluation purposes, visual effects were stripped to their barest necessities, and as such physical models were only marginally required to approximate their appearances in the final production. It was in this specific use that "pre-visualization model" has become the more commonly used terminology. The advent of CGI has not abolished the use of animatics, they being a too valuable tool for directors and supervisors. On the contrary, CGI has made it easier to employ the tool. The moment the bare essentials of a CGI model is assembled, i.e. the wire-frame model, "light" versions of the model were typically employed for these pre-evaluation purposes. "Light", as in light RAM-memory computer requirements, in this respect typically meant, basic versions of CGI models as later employed in productions, but without the heavy computer processor usage for detailed texturing, rendering or lighting, often preliminary wire-frame models, clad with a non-nondescript skin.

USS Pasteur with inscale Negh'Var class test models

USS Pasteur studio model with in-scale Negh'Var warship camera test models

Not only a very useful aid for camera teams, directors, and VFX supervisors in the pre-CGI age, physical test models were also useful aids for post-production compositors of visual effects shots. As physical filming models were very rarely built in scale to each other, test models were often quickly built in scale with the filming model of the week they were supposed to interact with. Footage was shot with these in-scale models relative to each other in pre-production evaluation filming. The footage was then handed over to the compositors as visual aid in compositing the final shots, by superimposing appropriately scaled footage of the corresponding studio model over the footage of the test model. The more commonly used Star Trek models had several variously scaled test model counterparts. With respect to whichever filming model they were supposed to interact with, test models were occasionally annotated with remarks such as "Scale to..." on the test models themselves, as was evidenced on several of the numerous test models that were sold in the 2006–2008 wave of Star Trek auctions.

Matt Jefferies pre-visualization model of the USS Enterprise interior sets

Jefferies' model of the USS Enterprise interior sets

Several styrofoam test models were also constructed of interior sets – prior to definitive, full-scale construction – throughout the run of the Star Trek franchise. Apart from being an aid in establishing camera angles, they were also an aid in evaluating a set design and, as such, in these cases, the functions of a test model and study model greatly overlapped. Examples of interior set test models were the models for the Excelsior-class bridge [8], the interiors of Deep Space 9 [9] [10], stellar cartography [11], and the Dauntless-class bridge [12], among others. The oldest known such model, was the (cardboard) pre-visualization model Matt Jefferies constructed in 1966 of the interiors sets for the original Enterprise as an orientation aid for directors and cameramen. (Star Trek: The Original Series Sketchbook, pp. 94-112)

With the advent of CGI, the physical test model did became a redundant aid.

Maquette

Constitution class shuttlebay maquette

Datin's shuttlebay maquette, arguably the first of its kind for Star Trek

Occasionally used to refer to all other types of studio models, the French-derived term maquette is usually reserved to signify scaled models of immobile structures, such as interiors and buildings, landscape miniatures or planet miniatures, intended specifically for on-screen use. As such, they are not to be confused with camera test models of interiors (not for on-screen use) and/or sets (full scale constructions for actors to interact with, in real time). Typically, they are constructed out of time and/or budgetary considerations or if an intended setting is deemed too imaginary to realize using existing sets or real life settings. While perhaps not being perceived as "glamorous" as their starship counterparts, and thus less publicized about, maquettes have been utilized throughout most of the run of the Star Trek franchise.

One of the earliest, if not the earliest, examples of such models used in the franchise was Richard C. Datin's model of the USS Enterprise's shuttlebay. He constructed this model in 1966, for the TOS episode "The Galileo Seven". Greg Jein repeated this in 1989 with the shuttlebay for the refit-configuration for use in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.

Mars model

Doug Drexler with the maquette for "Lifesigns"

As for buildings, generic futuristic-looking building models were often constructed to be positioned in front of a matte painting, to give the scene additional depth on-screen when filmed, as was the case in the Mars vista scene in VOY: "Lifesigns". Some of those models were featured in the TNG Season 2 DVD special feature: "Inside Starfleet Archives", and in it, it was discerned that they were usually built with whatever materials were on hand. Other examples were the models of Starfleet Headquarters (DS9: "Paradise Lost") and the building blown up in VOY: "The Killing Game, Part II". Though well into the CGI age, that building was built because, as Dan Curry explained, "When it comes to blowing up buildings, models still look far more convincing than CGI, simply because there's so many details to be included in such a sequence. This is why, for the Voyager Nazi episode, we built a 15-foot miniature building to blow up." (Star Trek: Communicator issue 148, p. 49) Numerous building models were sold during the 2006-2008 wave of Star Trek auctions.

Planet maquette set up for filming at the Westheimer Effects Company Earth Studio model prepared by ILM staffer Frank Ordaz
Original Series planet maquette set up for filming at Westheimer's
ILM staffer Frank Ordaz preparing the Earth maquette

Planet miniatures were a rarity within the Star Trek franchise as (full view) planets were traditionally executed either as matte paintings or, from the mid-1990s onward as CGI-effects. They have been used occasionally on The Original Series, most notably by the Westheimer Effects Company (American Cinematographer, October 1967, p. 716), but rarely afterwards. Still, those rare instances involved ILM, who used physical studio models to represent celestial bodies, the Genesis planet in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, and the Moon and Earth (night, and day view) models in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock being the prime examples.

Mordan IV maquette with creators Mike Okuda and Rick Sternbach

Mordan IV cityscape maquette with builders Mike Okuda and Rick Sternbach

As far as landscape miniatures were concerned, they were also utilized in the Star Trek franchise. Though long views were usually executed as matte-painting effects, there were instances where the producers felt that the added three-dimensionality of a model could enhance an intended effect of depth perception. One of the earliest examples was the Deneb IV, or rather Farpoint Station, landscape model for TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint". This maquette was constructed by Greg Jein. Though he is usually associated with his starship studio model builds, landscape miniatures were actually a specialty of his. As a matter of fact, his work on a fairground maquette in the film 1941 won him a "Best Visual Effects Academy Award" nomination. Jein and his company also constructed the landscape miniature of the barren landscape Sisko experienced, after entering the Bajoran wormhole, in DS9: "The Emissary". (Movie Magic (TV series), "Models and Miniatures: A Model of Perfection"–documentary) To come across believably on-screen, landscape miniatures and (for that matter) the other interior maquette types tend to be quite large, and due to their size, none of these are known to have survived, to date.

Curry's remark in the regard of the "The Killing Game, Part II" maquette notwithstanding, by 2011, the maquette has been superseded by CGI, as far as television and movie productions are concerned.

Display models

Display models, or simply models, are scaled miniatures intended for on-screen use for actors to interact with. Typically, they were most commonly employed as adornments of sets where first unit filming with actors took place. While strictly speaking they confirm to the definition of "studio models", as set dressings, these models were in practice treated and considered as props and therefore understood to be a special effects element. Nevertheless, actual filming models as well as study models are known to have fulfilled the role of set dressing such as the Class F shuttlecraft studio model, the three-foot Enterprise model, the Epsilon IX station models and the proto-Nebula-class. However, the by far most utilized display models originated from commercially available model kits, the products from AMT/ERTL in particular.

An especially noteworthy category of display models were the models Gregory Jein, Inc. built, originally intended for representation in the Star Trek Encyclopedia and Star Trek Chronology reference books. Never meant to function as filming models, as they were only intended to fill in gaps in Star Trek lore to represent ships that were otherwise not seen on-screen in the franchise, and therefore not outfitted with internal lighting, some of these nevertheless showed up on-screen as display models. Examples of these were the Daedalus-class model, DY-100-class display model and the Bonaventure (C1-21) model.

On very rare occasions, such as the Malcorian warp ship or Jonathan Archer's Remote controlled model spaceship, a design was conceived to be a model in the first place. Yet, on at least one occasion, in the case of the Constellation-class model, while the design started out as a display model, it eventually spawned a full-fledged filming model.

Demise of the physical studio model

As touched upon in the previous sections, the craft of physical studio model building has been increasingly relegated to the fringes in the motion picture business, due to versatility, increased sophistication, and the cost effectiveness of CGI. For the Star Trek franchise, the years 1997 to 1998 (during which DS9 Season 6, VOY Season 4 and Star Trek: Insurrection were produced) marked the completion of the full transition from physical studio model building to CGI studio model building. In 2004, Senior Illustrator and Designer Doug Drexler summarized, "Having been one of the poor slobs once covered with paint and glue, there is a wonderfulness to actually seeing something that you have created right there in front of you. But it's ultimately not worth it. Physical models fall apart, age poorly and their surfaces are not infinitely and nearly instantly adjustable. To look realistic, they need to be enormous and therefore unwieldly. Their lighting systems break down and are not easily repaired, their electrical systems can short out and often create interference messing up motion control equipment; seriously, the list goes on and on. Finally, miniatures just can't match CGI for visual quality. Even the expensive and gigantic Enterprise-E model had problems; in First Contact, I could make out tooling marks on the hull. Meanwhile, in many shots of the large Enterprise-D model, you can see the bumps in the paint." (Star Trek: Communicator issue 148, p. 51)

While there is no denying the arguments stated by Drexler, Star Trek visual effects staff members, born and bred with the traditional methods, have met the introduction of the new technology with mixed feelings, as numerous production staffers have commented upon, some of them expressing their own motivations:

  • Dan Curry (Visual Effects Producer) in 1996:

    "It will come to be one of the dominant ways to achieve visual effects in the future. But I feel that the days of the miniature are not completely gone. There are some people, at least in our generation of filmmakers, who are more comfortable with miniatures. Just the fact that they're really there, you can light them, and there's a certain reality about them, forces CGI to be very, very careful to be like that. One of the observations I have about CGI is that the people who do it well, do it really well, but a lot of people who work in that field have backgrounds in mathematics and computers, and not necessarily in photography and fine arts. They may not have the [best] relationship with how things really look, which comes from standing out in a field and painting a landscape. One of the best ways of understanding light is by spending time looking at it [....] For me, the future would be a matter of speed. For us, who have worked with these ships, we can get right up to it and say, 'I'd like to see it from right here.' When you work with CGI, because you start off with wireframes, there's a lot more compromises in the exactness of angles and what's going on with the lighting than there is in a miniature, simply because you can see it here. It's not quite the same. But I think CGI will become probably the dominant technique of creating visual effects. I don't know what year that will be, but it certainly looks it's going to go that way." (Star Trek: The Next Generation USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D Blueprints, booklet, pp. 14-15)

  • Greg Jein (Model Maker) in 1996:

    "Photography didn't kill art, like portrait painting or illustration; and similarly, I'm sure there will always be a need for models. Right now there are some things that CGI can't do, but given enough time and money, they will accomplish, say, explosions, and things like that. It's a question Dave Allen and I were talking about. Stop-motion animators are running out of business, too. That has happened very fast, but I'm more into the tactile thing, so I'd rather be playing with goo than punching a keyboard. It's amazing, some of the stuff that came out this past year. My God, If they go the way they've been going, then CGI will become both economical and a mainstay of television production, especially. In feature production they still have a way to go. As far as miniatures are concerned, I'll remain optimistic for the time being." (Star Trek: The Next Generation USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D Blueprints, booklet, pp. 14-15)

  • David Merriman, Jr. (Model Maker) in 1996:

    "Now, as CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) matures as a viable alternative to effects model shots, I would be surprised if I got any future work. Not because the model building jobs in the industry aren't out there. It's just that I'm not that hungry for them anymore. I've had my fling, and today ask too much money for my work. I like CGI! CGI will become the agent of a situation that I have long hoped to see come about: the elimination of actors! Specifically, politically active actors: all too often assuming the airs of royalty and spoilt children. I look to the day when the word "Hollywood Celebrity" will describe pimple-faced computer geek wearing a pocket-protector, seated in front of a Silicon Graphics display, digitizing scantily clad Jane Fonda look-alikes. CGI is good!" (Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models, issue 30, 1998, p. 42)

  • John Grower (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 1999:

    "The whole nature of doing the ships in CG was something that really hadn't been done before up close...That took up a lot of development. I think we pushed it as far as we could in the amount of time we had [remark: for Star Trek: Insurrection], and were pretty successful. I think it harkens a new age, in that the next time we do it it'll be even better. We're just now starting to evolve towards being able to mix and match CG and miniatures(...)obviously miniatures have their place and will be used, but just knowing that you can do the CG just opens up a lot of creative freedom." (Star Trek: Communicator issue 121, p. 58)

  • Rick Sternbach (Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant) in 1999:

    "Certainly for television CGI is very cost effective, and for many effects in features, CGI can accomplish what models cannot. I would think that miniatures will likely be around for some time, since even the latest USS Enterprise NCC-1701-E for First Contact was a ten-foot long model build by ILM, and extensive use of miniatures highlighted the miniseries From the Earth to the Moon. Cost considerations and visual effects aside, there is something immensely satisfying in seeing one's five-view drawings come to life as a real, three-dimensional object to ogle at and admire the workmanship, and to point to all the neat fiddly bits and wonder, "Hmmm...what if I put a Type XI phaser emitter over here and that'll leave room for a quantum microtorpedo launcher over there..."." (Sci-Fi & Fantasy Models, issue 36, April 1999, p. 34)

  • Alex Jaeger (Visual Effects Art Director) in 2004:

    "When you build a practical model, you have reality working for you. You don't have to worry whether it is going to look real or not, because it will as long as you put enough details on it." (Star Trek: Communicator issue 148, p. 51)

  • John Eaves (Senior Illustrator) in 2004:

    "There is a place for both. CGI takes all the hard edges off and blends the VFX elements together flawlessly. But models still have a look and weight that CGI doesn't [....] Models will always have a place in my heart." (Star Trek: Communicator issue 148, p. 51}

  • Doug Drexler (Production Illustrator) in 2009:

    "Many people say they can always spot a CG model...that's except when they didn't! And they don't know they didn't! I guarantee that plenty of stuff has passed right by...usually real world stuff, because you aren't expecting it. I love physical models too, but CGI is better, not because it is easier (...and who says it's easier? You couldn't prove it by my life!) but because of how much more we can get out of it. The truth is that you could never detail a miniature as finely as a CG model. Maybe once upon a time, but not any more. We can fly a squadron of fully detailed vipers, with complete cockpit...animations playing on their monitors, characters in spacesuits flying them, with right into the fully detailed flight pod of the hugely gigantic BSG model, where there are people walking around...vehicles driving… and everything is fully lit, self and otherwise. Never happen in the physical miniature realm.(...) How many of the far out aliens in the new Trek film are makeup? There was a day, not long ago, when it all would have been makeup. I think miniatures will still be around for at least the next two decades, but their use will continue to dwindle. The same thing is going to happen to set construction, but to a lesser degree. same with stunt work. Eventually the audience will be computer generated as well...only kidding. But this is true: We did a pilot for a show where half the sets were virtual, and you wouldn't know." [13](X)

  • Paul Olsen (Model Painter) in 2012:

    "I was surprised that more than a few people asked about models and wished the films would drop CGI for models and build proper models…quite a number of people who made it a point that they liked CGI for effects, but would prefer seeing something ‘real’ when it came to models. Are you listening, Paramount? Richard, Jim, we might work together again yet!" (Star Trek: Creating the Enterprise, p. 88)

  • Ronald B. Moore (Visual Effects Supervisor) in 2012:

    "One thing about a physical model is that it shows wear. Every time you use it there is a little less shine or a little more damage. We would try to keep them in good shape but they got handled a lot. A computer model is just the opposite. It seems like the models get worked on continuously. A little change here, a little improvement there. Perhaps we want to get really close to a section in shot? That area gets improved. For the most part every time you use the model it gets a little better." (Flying Starships, pp. 33-34)

The hopes of the production staffers that physical models would somehow remain in a niche capacity notwithstanding, by 2010, the craft had all but disappeared from the motion picture and television industry for filming purposes, though it has remained in existence for the fabrication of display models for institutions such as museums, corporations, defense contractors, and even for motion picture productions when the need for one is perceived. In addition, the sudden onslaught of CGI from 1993 onward, caught quite a few (traditional) visual effects houses, with a heavy physical studio model emphasis, unawares. While ILM was a pioneering company in the new technique and thus making the transition gracefully, Image G for example, nearly folded, but managed to cope with the transition eventually, with another well known effects house of the time, Boss Film Studios, being caught off guard and forced to close its doors.

Appendices

Further reading

Documentaries and specials

See also

External link