Re: www.action-figure-supplies.co.uk
Posted: 19 Aug 2016 13:05
This is brilliant. Is that model something youd be willing to share?OllyOrc wrote:Apologies for hijacking the thread but I did some research into 3d scanners and they are all pretty bad at the moment (especially that XYZ hand held) unless you pay £3000 for a David2 3d scanner or the cheaper MatterandForm £380
http://www.david-3d.com/en/
https://matterandform.net/scanner
However both hate 3d scanning small objects and cheaper ones can't handle most lighting and reflection, unless the model is painted matt magenta. 3d scanners create a point cloud that can later be converted to a mesh and saved as .STL or .obj for 3d printing or first fixing the mesh errors in 3d programs like Blender. A Finnish professor wrote a guide on how to make your own 3d scanner with 2 webcams and a projector but I also found that Autodesk offers free 123DCatch, that uses a series of photographs taken from all angles to generate a point cloud that can be converted into a mesh (looks promising from initial tests).
First trial using a Red Shadow (should really split body parts and scan individually)
RedShadow3dScan1.png
Point Cloud
RedShadow3dScan3.jpg
Textured Mesh
RedShadow3dScan4.jpg
Which will hopefully be faster and a better starting point than manually creating meshes in Blender (see below - First go at manually modelling a Red Shadow head in Blender using premade German helmet (so many different curves in the original head when u examine closely which take ages to recreate)
RedShadowHeadBlender2.jpg
One of the best 3d scanners is the Faro arm (40k) used in automotive and aerospace, so will have to ask the guy at work to scan a few items - lol (although doubtful he'd risk doing it)
**Check out this guys review of 123DCatch and Recap360 its bigger brother**
http://nicklievendag.com/autodesk-photo ... recap-360/
Yoda 3D Scanned 3D Print — Autodesk ReCap 360 by Nick Lievendag on Sketchfab