Placeholder: the iconic spaceship of Destination: Void, by Franck Herbert (1965) the iconic spaceship of Destination: Void, by Franck Herbert (1965)

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the iconic spaceship of Destination: Void, by Franck Herbert (1965)

1 year ago

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Model

SSD-1B

Guidance Scale

7

Dimensions

1280 × 720

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the iconic spaceship of Destination: Void, by Franck Herbert (1965)
[art by Bruce Pennington]
[Kupka] Driven by an unexplained urge, Ensign Williams followed her instincts, venturing outside the secured areas of the Starfleet vessel USS Enterprise in a shuttlecraft. She flew across the desert-like surface of the uncharted Class M planet they were orbiting, leaving the mountains they had been surveying behind. The barren landscape stretched as far as the sensors could detect, a stark contrast to the sleek corridors and bustling activity of the starships she called home. The sterile enviro
[art by Bruce Pennington]
(art by Philippe Druillet's Délirius, 1973, written by Jacques Lob) Sloan in the celestial city: Hold me back or I'll make a mess
[art of John Blanche, frank frazetta, Heath Robinson and Norman Rockwell] The starship drifted through the void, its hull a lattice of blackened chrome and crimson light, pulsating. Within its core, the engine hummed with an energetic rhythm, a mechanical heartbeat defying the silence of the abyss.Cloaked in an enigmatic aura, the pilot sat in solitude, her face half-hidden behind a mask of iridescent crystal. She was a navigator of the forgotten, charting pathways through dimensions no human mi
Chris Foss style art, of a huge luxury space liner, white and gold, gorgeous nebula behind, dreamlike, perfect
SNFIIN'GLUE mag cover by Ralph Steadman for a special issue on medical tooling for Extra Terrestrial experiments (zone 51), guest star: FBI special agent investigating on UFO for experiments on humans
[art of John Blanche, frank frazetta, Heath Robinson and Norman Rockwell] The starship drifted through the void, its hull a lattice of blackened chrome and crimson light, pulsating. Within its core, the engine hummed with an energetic rhythm, a mechanical heartbeat defying the silence of the abyss.Cloaked in an enigmatic aura, the pilot sat in solitude, her face half-hidden behind a mask of iridescent crystal. She was a navigator of the forgotten, charting pathways through dimensions no human mi
[Kupka] Driven by an unexplained urge, Ensign Williams followed her instincts, venturing outside the secured areas of the Starfleet vessel USS Enterprise in a shuttlecraft. She flew across the desert-like surface of the uncharted Class M planet they were orbiting, leaving the mountains they had been surveying behind. The barren landscape stretched as far as the sensors could detect, a stark contrast to the sleek corridors and bustling activity of the starships she called home. The sterile enviro
Bruce Pennington’s 1974 cover art for “Beyond This Horizon,” by Robert Heinlein
(art by Philippe Druillet's Délirius, 1973, written by Jacques Lob) helicopter crash

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