Has anyone else noticed that in the scene where Indy is consulting his notes and looking through a theodolite to find the real location of the map room, the notebook is actually an accountant's four-column, double-entry ledger? http://s498.photobucket.com/albums/rr34 ... ledger.jpg
Does this mean everyone's gonna go and re-make their props?
Here's a thought instead.
Just buy yourself a bunch of cheap, but nice to handle, notebooks [not necessarily, acid free paper, 5" x 7", grey-green with a red spine] and spend the coming years replicating your OWN adventures in daily entries and drawings.
Enigmata
Magno wrote:Whoa, trippy. Can't imagine why Jones would want anything like that...
Actually it makes sense for a scientist to have a way to neatly sort his data. One broad and three narrow columns might be used like this: Item description Yellow metal processional staff headpiece, circular, 4" diameter with amber gem mounted off centre. Bird [pheonix?] motif, workmanship and style suggest Ancient Egyptian. Likely age or culture pre-Akenaden Dynasty. Possible purpose ritual processions / refractive locating overall dimensions 5 cubits (incl. staff)
or just
Find - general notes | Dig site | grid location | depth
broad mouthed earthenware pot # 7 | 12 | B6 | 17 In.
BendingOak wrote:those aren't collums , those are edges of other pages pulling back.
I have to disagree with you there, they are definitely red lines - the page edges - unlike the ledger lines - are dirty brown, dog-eared and not dead parallel.
Oak, he's talking about the 4 red verticle lines on the page itself, not just the paper. There's one off the the left and three on the right side.
I've seen this for years but just thought it was a standard notebook. Interesting to point out exactly what it is. Thanks.
ITS A SURVEY ENGINEERS BOOK. THE DEVICE HE USES TO FIND THE MAP ROOM IS A TRANSIT. THAT WAS MY OCCUPATION FOR YEARS. I ALWAYS USED MY BOOK FOR WRITING NOTES TOO!
TAKE CARE
Gringo wrote:ITS A SURVEY ENGINEERS BOOK. THE DEVICE HE USES TO FIND THE MAP ROOM IS A TRANSIT. THAT WAS MY OCCUPATION FOR YEARS. I ALWAYS USED MY BOOK FOR WRITING NOTES TOO!
TAKE CARE
No reason to get upset. To me it doesn't look like that to me. I know that you are talking about the verticle lines but at the very top corner it looks like it's folding in.
Can anyone a have a different of a opinion with people freaking out.
yup, Cat among the pigeons.
well, it's only an insignificant transitory prop. I don't think my minor observation is going to shake the foundations of Indygeardom.
Enigmata
Gringo wrote:ITS A SURVEY ENGINEERS BOOK. THE DEVICE HE USES TO FIND THE MAP ROOM IS A TRANSIT. THAT WAS MY OCCUPATION FOR YEARS. I ALWAYS USED MY BOOK FOR WRITING NOTES TOO!
TAKE CARE
No reason to get upset. To me it doesn't look like that to me. I know that you are talking about the verticle lines but at the very top corner it looks like it's folding in.
Can anyone a have a different of a opinion with people freaking out.
There is a pencil line that runs across the red lines diagonally. I have a few of these books somewhere from when my grandfather used them (19-teens), my father (1940s-50s) then myself (1980s) as students and engineers in the field, You can still get them. In fact, if you root through the storeroom of an old civil engineering firm and look in old transit and theodolite cases, I am sure you can find vintage 1930's notebooks of this type.
Hey BendingOak. I am not saying I am positive about the book. As a kid I always thought it was an old style notebook. It made sense. Then when I went into that occupation it made sense that wherever Indy snagged the transit, he probably grabbed the survey book to go with it. I have seen these period survey books as Rambler has. I guess in the end its still speculation but I quess thats whats all the fun
Take care and lets see if we can find out. Now I'm on a new quest!!
enigmata_wood wrote:yup, Cat among the pigeons.
well, it's only an insignificant transitory prop. I don't think my minor observation is going to shake the foundations of Indygeardom.
Enigmata
clearly you dont' know this place very well.
many of us measure the brims on our hats in millimeters and have SA boot laces. If it turns out that the map room journal was in fact a columned ledger, God help whoever is on duty at the local office supply stores.
enigmata_wood wrote:yup, Cat among the pigeons.
well, it's only an insignificant transitory prop. I don't think my minor observation is going to shake the foundations of Indygeardom.
Enigmata
clearly you dont' know this place very well.
many of us measure the brims on our hats in millimeters and have SA boot laces. If it turns out that the map room journal was in fact a columned ledger, God help whoever is on duty at the local office supply stores.
Don't forget the socks .......... and the sea plane hat was grey no, no i mean brown
enigmata_wood wrote:yup, Cat among the pigeons.
well, it's only an insignificant transitory prop. I don't think my minor observation is going to shake the foundations of Indygeardom.
Enigmata
clearly you dont' know this place very well.
many of us measure the brims on our hats in millimeters and have SA boot laces. If it turns out that the map room journal was in fact a columned ledger, God help whoever is on duty at the local office supply stores.
Don't forget the socks .......... and the sea plane hat was grey no, no i mean brown
Does anyone know the exact length, in nanometers, of Indy's stubble?
enigmata_wood wrote:yup, Cat among the pigeons.
well, it's only an insignificant transitory prop. I don't think my minor observation is going to shake the foundations of Indygeardom.
Enigmata
clearly you dont' know this place very well.
many of us measure the brims on our hats in millimeters and have SA boot laces. If it turns out that the map room journal was in fact a columned ledger, God help whoever is on duty at the local office supply stores.
Don't forget the socks .......... and the sea plane hat was grey no, no i mean brown
Does anyone know the exact length, in nanometers, of Indy's stubble?
I think that depends on the scene, but I could be wrong ;-)