The Ultimate Guide to Lightsabers eBook

That is one of ANH shared stunts. If we're going on the idea that the V2 never had its clamp removed, then it would most likely be the V3/Shared Stunt. I believe that pic is from an old ESB BTS video so it lines up with the idea that both the V2 and Shared Stunt looked alike up until a certain point in the making of RotJ. However, that shouldn't be taken as "the V3 turned into what it looks like now", though it may have lead to it. I'm under the impression that what it looks like now is a result of touch ups and redressing after production had finished on RotJ for archival or promotional reasons.

Ohhhhhh okay. It makes so much more sense when you say that BTS image is from ESB and not ROTJ.

thank you!
 
Hi Seth,

Thanks for including me in this project . . . personally I would foremost give credit to George Lucas of Lucasfilm Ltd. . . . for without whom this galaxy far, far away and from a long time ago would not exist nor would the infamous lightsabers wielded by the jedi knights as written down in the Journal of the Whills ... also Chris Trevas and Chris Reiff from Parts of Star Wars website should be mentioned by name even before others and myself ... they laid down the ground work or building blocks from which others could rise to the occassion and share their discoveries with all of us.

That said . . . I'm looking forward to many more revisions which will include even more information on lightsabers yet to be discovered and revealed. I for one know one other person residing in Rancho Obi-Wan, Petaluma California by the name of Steve Sansweet who would love a digital copy or perhaps even a real printed version to be reviewed and added to his famous collection :)

Chaïm
 
Wow. This is so great.

Only question now is when are we doing a run for the physical version for our nightstands?? ha
 
Looks great! I'll definitely buy this if it gets to that point. If you decide not to sell it then at least give us some way to offer a donation to you. Your work on the poster then this is excellent.
Is there any plan to do something for the prequel lightsabers?


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 
I'm gonna echo everyone here and just say you have done us all an incredible service. Thank you so much!

If you were to ever print this I'd buy it in a heartbeat. Thank you so much for putting together such an amazing and beautiful resource!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Hi Seth,
personally I would foremost give credit to George Lucas of Lucasfilm Ltd. . . . for without whom this galaxy far, far away and from a long time ago would not exist nor would the infamous lightsabers wielded by the jedi knights as written down in the Journal of the Whills ... also Chris Trevas and Chris Reiff from Parts of Star Wars website should be mentioned by name even before others and myself ... they laid down the ground work or building blocks from which others could rise to the occassion and share their discoveries with all of us.

Lucas-- OH I GUESS.. maybe I'm still a little bitter about the PT... but you're right of course.

I didn't know the names of the partsofsw guys, so without doubt I will now include them!

That said . . . I'm looking forward to many more revisions which will include even more information on lightsabers yet to be discovered and revealed. I for one know one other person residing in Rancho Obi-Wan, Petaluma California by the name of Steve Sansweet who would love a digital copy or perhaps even a real printed version to be reviewed and added to his famous collection :)
Chaïm

That would be awesome! Steve was the first guy to really get in there and dig, paving the way for Don Biess and JW Rinzler to add their contributions.


Is there any plan to do something for the prequel lightsabers?

Like I said-- probably not. There's no mystery about their construction. This book is for people looking to build an OT saber from sourcing parts. Since the PT sabers were designed and fabricated from scratch, you either buy a replica, a resin cast, or 3D print one.

They are also fairly well documented. In fact, one of the things that got this happening was my son's copy of the Official Lightsaber Guide from Lucasfilm. Most of the OT props covered are wrong. The Skywalker saber, Obi-Wan's saber, and Vader's saber are all represented by their ROTS versions. Luke's Jedi saber is technically right-- but of course it's the "hero" not the V2 or Yuma.... damn it, that book really pisses me off! ;P

I just don't love the PT sabers. The designs held by the stars (Obi-Wan, Qui-Gon, Mace, Yoda, Anakin) are cool-- but I really dislike the ROTS versions of the OT sabers, and beyond them, pretty much every other saber you see is the same basic design. The entire Jedi council (that isn't a main character) has a minor variation on the same design, and I always thought that was a major cop out.

Wow. This is so great.

Only question now is when are we doing a run for the physical version for our nightstands?? ha

Thank you!

A few people are asking about a print version. I'm inclined to say no-- mostly for three reasons:

1. The legality. Even though I never have plans to sell, a print version might indicate that I do. Even if it were to cover print costs, the fact that I can't source the legal owners of most of the images, that means I'd be opening myself up to trouble. I also don't know how Lucasfilm would feel about such a thing. I intentionally designed it at an odd size with no print bleed and let the page count fall in a way that it's not an easy print and run.

2. Ownership. The best way around the legal problems would be to have the material copyrighted, but I'm not comfortable with that given that all the work was done by other people. I just organized this all. The second I put it out as a book, I'm suddenly the voice/face/expert and I don't think that's fair to the countless people who contributed to this-- especially since none of this contributions were specifically FOR this. I'm just giving back to the community, I don't now, or ever, want to, or expect to, get any money for this.

3. It's organic. This isn't meant to be a permanent thing. I plan to update it regularly. I made this last week. In the last TWO DAYS we've made new discoveries about the V2. A print run would require minimums and I don't want to be stuck with a box full of outdated information! At some point, we'll see more of the V2. We'll find the t-track. Roy will stop being soooo lazy and draw blueprints for other sabers. If I keep it electronic, it's always easy to update and keep current.

Now, all that said... I did build it at a high enough resolution that it could be printed. If somebody wanted to take the PDF to a copy shop, pay to have some color prints made and trimmed out, they are more than welcome to.

Once we get through this beta I'll get the first official version done, and Roy has been kind enough to host it at wannawanag where anyone can download it and do what they like-- just like the lightsaber tree.

The only thing I don't want is for somebody to print it and sell it. That would be a dick move.
 
Obi-Wan hero has an aged brass neck grenade windvane, which can appear very close to bronze. They may have used bronze paint on the V2 neck to approximate the aged brass.

For the ROTJ hero, though, check the screen cap of the ISYHCANL hero and look at the control box bars, which match the neck in color, also the on set pic of Mark resting his chin on the Yuma: brass all the way.

Can't speak to what paint was used on the resin stunts of the hero-- most agree that it's something between brass and copper.

But only brass was seen on screen. Even the hero construction scene, the neck is dimly lit at firest and it looks like it could be copper. Then the light hits it, and you're like, "ah...yep, brass."

It goes like this-- right?

Obi-Wan's hero had a bronze neck, the stunts were mostly matte black to cut down on light bouncing during the duel. To approximate, the necks were hit with bronze, likely on top of the black (as we're noticing on the V2 right now!

The V2 was scraped down to look how it looks.

The V3's neck was painted copper, which the Yuma and close-up "hero" emulated.

Right?
 
I've seen people disagree round this parts about the difference between brass and copper and bronze....

But aside from being specific about paint colors, I agree with you on which prop has what.
 
d33d8c8e71e062e35ec5cfc23ca63615.jpg


A couple too many "more" on page 39
 
When all is said and done no one asked you to do this so thank you for taking your own time to collate all the information here, and thank you to all the board members whose hours of research and enthusiasm can lead to such a handy guide without having to dig through threads. This will be so helpful! Great stuff!
 

Your message may be considered spam for the following reasons:

If you wish to reply despite these issues, check the box below before replying.
Be aware that malicious compliance may result in more severe penalties.
Back
Top