Welcome back to another installment of the Galactic Style Guide, the monthly series where we break down the ‘Star Wars aesthetic’ to help you create a more authentic ‘outer persona’! While quality reenacting and living history like to focus on the ‘common’ experience, Disney’s Galactic Starcruiser hotel experience is billing itself as a luxury cruise, and I’ve seen plenty of folks online asking, ‘What am I supposed to wear???’ With that in mind, I’ve combed my reference library and collected some examples of formal outfits to help give folks an idea of what ‘fancy dress’ looks like in the Galaxy Far, Far Away. Following up on last month’s look at examples from onscreen, this time around we’re focusing on outfits seen in EU materials.
I talk a lot on this blog about the idea of ‘reenactorisms’ – inaccuracies that get unknowingly (or knowingly!) perpetuated because someone didn’t do their research. Usually when discussing these blunders we’re talking about individuals making them, but I wanted to point out two examples to day that prove the big players are not immune to making sloppy mistakes either! Following the release of Episode III in 2005, LA’s FIDM (Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising) hosted the exhibit Dressing a Galaxy, which featured 100 screen-used costumes from Episodes I through VI. From the pictures I’ve seen online it was an absolutely incredible presentation. However, one tableau of costumes held a glaring mistake for all to see:
Anything seem ‘off’ about this?
If you can’t spot it, maybe we’d better check the references:
I had written about this prop years ago, but that was really just noticing that the item Qui-Gon hands Anakin was the same as one in the Episode I Racer game:
Well, last week I decided to enlist the help of the prop hive-mind and posted a thread on the RPF seeking help in identifying this piece, and in a surprisingly rapid timeframe, one of the respondents had it pinned down!
Ever since completing it back in the summer of 2017, I was never fully satisfied with my Rebel ‘swoop’ helmet. My dissatisfaction wasn’t necessarily with the construction—despite being my first serious foray into Pepakura, I think I pretty closely nailed the shape and paintjob (accurate light gray, not white!)—but rather with its usefulness to a Rebel fighter….
Welcome back to another installment of the Galactic Style Guide, the monthly series where we break down the ‘Star Wars aesthetic’ to help you create a more authentic ‘outer persona’! While quality reenacting and living history are geared more towards the ‘common’ experience, Disney’s Galactic Starcruiser hotel experience is billing itself as a luxury cruise, and I’ve seen plenty of folks online asking, ‘What am I supposed to wear???’ With that in mind, I’ve combed my reference library and collected some examples of formal outfits to help get an idea of what ‘fancy dress’ looks like in the Galaxy Far, Far Away. Since any discussion of in-universe formalwear is really a discussion of the clothing of the galactic upstrata, and since the Original Trilogy is—aside from Leia—generally not concerned with these kinds of characters, our best examples from top-tier sources come from the Prequel films (which were very much focused on galactic elites). One thing’s for sure: Trisha Biggar’s costume designs reveal a clear preference for robes, cloaks, and coats in late-Republic senators’ clothing:
It’s been quite a while since I’ve had any new Star Warsy whittlings to show off! I had planned to do some whittling along the Appalachian Trail last year (and found the perfect little neck-knife in a hiker box)…but unfortunately hiking 15-20 miles a day doesn’t leave time for much else besides eating and sleeping. I actually carved up this little consular ship last midwinter, and forgot I had been sitting on it for a whole year! Unlike the Republic cruiser I last whittled, this one was made out of poplar, so I was able to include a much higher level of detail:
It’s almost certainly Blockade Runner nostalgia, but I think this line of ships look so much better seen from an aft perspective.
Contrary to popular belief, while they look very similar, this is NOT the same model ship as the iconic ‘blockade runner’ of Episode IV!
Happy new year and welcome to our first post of 2022! I apologize for the delay in new postings, but since getting off the Trail my wife and I moved to a new city, which is always stressful and takes priority from hobbies like running this blog. Since I’ve been thinking a lot about living spaces lately, I thought it would be a great time to share a great nugget I uncovered while doing some recent research.
art by Hans Jennsen (Inside the Worlds of Episode I)
Say what you will about the Prequels, but I always thought despite being slaves, Anakin and Shmi’s home in Mos Espa seemed downright cozy (it’s probably all the low ceilings, rounded corners, and warm, creamy colors – cob-style architecture for the win!). But can we know how big it really was?
Happy Christmas everyone, and welcome back to the Galactic Style Guide, the monthly series where we break down the ‘Star Wars aesthetic’ in order to help you create a more accurate ‘outer persona’! In this month’s installment (our final post of 2021!) we’re wrapping up our look at those ubiquitous pieces of ‘hard kit’, datapads and viewscreens. While datapads have really taken off in the last couple years (since visitors to the Galaxy’s Edge parks started kitbash-decorating phone cases), if you’re only familiar with them from fanmade creations, you may be surprised to see that the MANY visual examples we have from licensed sources are detailed very differently!
From an in-universe visuals sense, these three examples are perhaps the most accurate homemade ‘datapads’ I’ve seen yet. What is it that makes them so well-done?
Hello there! After six months in the woods, I’m happy to announce that our 2021 Appalachian Trail southbound thruhike is successfully completed! Believe me when I say that it was one helluva adventure (and a pretty sweet honeymoon, to boot)! Now that we’re back in civilization I’m very much looking forward to getting back to active blogging here at Star Wars Living History…2022 is shaping up to be a big year with big things in the works!
the trail’s southern terminus at Springer Mountain, Georgia is wayyyyy more anticlimactic than Katahdin in Maine
A thruhike by the numbers: Total length: 2193.1 miles Total days: 182 (7 June to 5 December) Zeroes (non-hiking days): 22 (+4 for a wedding off-trail) Hostels visited: 24 Days hiked in the rain: 29 Night hikes: 27 Longest day: 23.7 miles Average distance hiked per day: 12.9 miles Weight lost: ~10 lbs My pack (HMG 3400 Windrider) base weight: 20 lbs +-2 My pack loaded for a five-day section: 32 lbs+-1 Packets of ramen and/or tuna eaten: too damn many Pints of ice cream eaten: not nearly enough!
If you’d like to see more pictures from our adventure, I did my best to keep up my Instagram from the trail (though I now realize it’s mostly landscapes, sunsets, and amphibians)…my photogenic wife’s IG gives a much better impression of the journey! If you’re thinking about planning your own thruhike or long-distance trip, I’m always happy to talk shop and answer any questions you might have. When there’s nothing to do but hike and think, I spent a good chunk of the last six months in a Star Wars-y headspace, and hopefully, at least a couple of the insights I had during my time on the AT will work their way into some future posts here! If there’s a topic you’d like to see discussed, please drop a comment down below!
Welcome back to the Galactic Style Guide, the monthly series where we break down the ‘Star Wars aesthetic’ in order to help you create a more accurate ‘outer persona’! For this installment, we’re taking a look at devices which seem as prevalent in the Galaxy Far Far Away as smartphones are here on Earth. While a comlink fulfils the role of a telephone (audio-only), a datapad or viewscreen fills the niche of a tablet computer, and is used to display or swap visual information (but not to make ‘calls’).
While datapads have really taken off in recent years (after visitors to Galaxy’s Edge started kitbash-decorating their phone cases), if you’re only familiar with them from these fanmade creations, you may be surprised to see that the MANY visual examples from official sources are designed very differently! This post will be primarily concerned with the general design of these devices’ screen sides, and then next month we’ll pay special attention to the rear face, to which so many would-be Batuu-bounders glue so many greeblies.