With "suppress stationary tie points" option enabled it may be possible to align photos without masking. This option removes feature points that stay at nearly the same pixels on several images so background becomes masked automatically
Iconasys has photography turntables that can automatically capture up to 8,000 images per rotation. Iconasys photography software can also remove the background automatically from all the images. Has Agisoft Metashape integration too. Makes the whole process much easier and quicker.
I paid around £150 for the turntable but there are cheaper models. Just make sure there's the built in camera remote trigger as some don't have that. And of course manual turntable with drawn increments work just as well - but are more involved.
Higher ISO can cause your photos to appear grainy (which sometimes looks nice) but doesn't help the photogrammetry software, so lowering that down to 100-200 will make the processing part a lot easier. I've just gone back over some later photos I used to successfully create 3D file (looking at the Properties > Details > ISO Image Settings) and the ISO was around 640 and the models created were good for my purposes. It seems newer cameras have much better noise suppression compared to older ones.
A few people asked about the 3d printed specimen stand - which you can download from here now: www.thingiverse.com/thing:6157772
I'm speechless, titanic video, plus it was exactly what I was looking for... Thanks man , seriously thanks 🙏...
With "suppress stationary tie points" option enabled it may be possible to align photos without masking. This option removes feature points that stay at nearly the same pixels on several images so background becomes masked automatically
I'll try it next time I have something to scan. :)
Iconasys has photography turntables that can automatically capture up to 8,000 images per rotation. Iconasys photography software can also remove the background automatically from all the images. Has Agisoft Metashape integration too. Makes the whole process much easier and quicker.
But it sounds more expensive...
brilliant tutorial.
You are using F22 with very high ISO values from what I can see. Try keeping ISO at 100 and have longer shutter speed to compensate.
Yeah, exactly.
I had a childish laugh that you made a MDF toilet seat
I've been calling it a toilet seat too! Lol
This turntable is $250, but the same company makes ones as low as $60. They also make one designed for people to stand on!
I paid around £150 for the turntable but there are cheaper models. Just make sure there's the built in camera remote trigger as some don't have that. And of course manual turntable with drawn increments work just as well - but are more involved.
Thank You so much...
Very nice sir!
What was that you did to find the center of the circle
Oh it's clearer in this video: th-cam.com/video/2Is4AmNsUFM/w-d-xo.html
Chào bạn nha.ok đấy bạn ơi
Semangat mantap mampir 👍
Hi, what is the name of the guide you show in this video
www.agisoft.com/pdf/PS_1.0.0_Tutorial%20(IL)%20-%20Coded%20Targes%20and%20Scale%20Bars.pdf
Not sure if the link will be shared but it is on the agisoft website.
peanuts!
How did you print it with wax?
th-cam.com/video/84955mrdwOc/w-d-xo.html
hello 3d printed parts link
That's a good point - where did I put this...
Не чарта не понял. Наверное интересно)))). Спецэффекты.
Write the time code for the part you did not understand?
What iso we should ues
Lowest possible
Higher ISO can cause your photos to appear grainy (which sometimes looks nice) but doesn't help the photogrammetry software, so lowering that down to 100-200 will make the processing part a lot easier. I've just gone back over some later photos I used to successfully create 3D file (looking at the Properties > Details > ISO Image Settings) and the ISO was around 640 and the models created were good for my purposes. It seems newer cameras have much better noise suppression compared to older ones.
NUT!
???