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The Star Fleet Uniform Recognition Manual is an unlicensed Star Trek reference book, as such neither recognized as official nor canonical by the franchise, that was written and illustrated by Shane Johnson and originally published by The Noron Group in 1985.

The main focus of the work primarily concentrated on uniforms and clothing only. It thus became, in retrospect, a companion volume to one of his later works, Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise, published in 1987 and with some – though not all – of the contents ported over to that work; Johnson had discovered by then that he could not incorporate all the uniforms and clothing details into the "General Information" section of the later Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise, which was an officially licensed reference book.

Contents[]

The book is divided into five chapters, all of which have their own headings.

Federation Color Codes[]

The first chapter, called "Federation Color Codes," is just that – a table of Federation color codes which adds eight colors to the list of thirty-two that Franz Joseph's design company provided in the Star Fleet Technical Manual. This "chapter" also includes tables of Star Fleet section colors past and present, and it also gives a key to the symbols that Johnson uses in the book. In the table of past section colors, Johnson identifies the Command Section's official color as "olive," not "tenne" as Joseph's company had stated, which William Ware Theiss had corroborated. (It had been television lighting and photography stock used in the 1960s that had made the Command Section uniforms appear to have the golden yellow color that Joseph and his "Gesellschaft" had called "tenne," rather than the olive green color that Theiss had actually intended them to have.)

Insignia and Rank[]

The second chapter, titled "Insignia And Rank," is a series of drawings, some of which also include text; they depict how starship assignment and service grades were previously indicated as well as how they have since been indicated.

Since Johnson originally wrote and published the manual not long after Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan was released, this chapter includes details about the uniforms that were introduced in that motion picture.

Uniforms (Obsolete)[]

The third chapter is titled "Uniforms (Obsolete)" and depicts the uniforms and other gear worn at the approximate time of TOS, which is incorrectly given as the early 2200s.

The uniforms shown in this chapter are all of William Ware Theiss's design for TOS, but the chapter erroneously includes a dress uniform design intended for female personnel that differs vastly from what was actually shown in TOS. A later, online-only revision by Johnson corrects this.

Uniforms (Current)[]

The fourth chapter is titled "Uniforms (Current)," and it primarily depicts the uniforms that were introduced in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. This particular uniform design is often called the "monster maroon" uniform because of the difficulty fans often have in assembling it for personal wearing.

This chapter of the manual includes, primarily, Robert Fletcher's SECOND series of uniform designs, his first (which is NOT depicted here) having been for Star Trek: The Motion Picture, but NOT Nilo Rodis-Jamero's additional designs for the later motion pictures.
The details for these uniforms were ported by Johnson from Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise, which could not fit all those details into its "General Information" section.

One uniform which is described and depicted in this chapter, but was not shown in any Star Trek motion picture, is the "Diplomatic Dress Uniform." The references Johnson employed in drawing it and listing its details are not known. Paramount Pictures is not known to have provided any photographs of this uniform for reference works; thus it is not considered an officially-recognized Starfleet uniform.

Intelligence Report[]

The fifth and final chapter, titled "Intelligence Report," shows Klingon uniforms past and present, as well as how the appearances of the Klingons have changed since they were first shown, and it concludes with an illustration of how the outfit Ricardo Montalban wore as Khan Noonien Singh might have looked when it was intact. According to Johnson, this outfit was actually the remains of a life support suit designed specifically for use with the DY series of sleeper ships.

Again, William Ware Theiss designed the original television-specific Klingon uniforms; Robert Fletcher designed the later motion picture-specific ones. No explanation is given for the differences in the appearances of Klingons.
Fletcher's design for Khan's outfit was meant to show off Ricardo Montalban's considerable muscular development, which was a by-product of a strenuous physical regimen which the actor then maintained specifically to counter the effects of a spinal disability, that later proved to have been the result of a birth deformity, that afflicted him until his last years.

Background information[]

  • In essence also being one, Johnson's book very much resembled in design the earlier, 1980 fan publication USS Enterprise Officer's Manual, which was co-written and illustrated by later Star Trek alumnus Doug Drexler, especially where the "Insignia And Rank" chapter was concerned.
  • The Star Fleet Uniform Recognition Manual has never been considered official Star Trek canon material, even though it does contain design details of the so-called "monster maroon" uniforms of Robert Fletcher's design that had not been officially referred to in any canon sources. It uses a timeline Paramount Pictures officially considers faulty, ascribing the time when the various ship badges became obsolete to the early decades of the 23rd century, which James T. Kirk's reference to the year 2283 in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan contradicts.
  • Published by the Arlington, Texas-based The Noron Group, the book was a follow-up of Johnson's equally unlicensed June 1984 Weapons and Field Equipment Technical Reference Manual fan publication, released by the same publisher and which likewise resembled Drexler's Manual. Aside from those featured in Star Trek, which takes up about half the book, attention is also given to the handheld equipment featured in the Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, and Space 1999 franchises.
  • While Memory Alpha usually does not condone the inclusion of unlicensed fan publications under their own heading – it being outside the purview of this wiki when none of their contents are later on used for canon purposes – the fact that part of its contents were ported over to the official, franchise licensed, Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise, warrants its own listing on this site, as opposed to Drexler's USS Enterprise Officer's Manual for example, or Johnson's own June 1984 publication.

See also[]

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