Wow! That's quite some difference between standard and pro versions!!


On 25 February 2014 13:23, Chris Marshall <chrismarshal...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Thanks both. I'll check it out.
>
> Cheers
>
>
>
> On 25 February 2014 13:14, Nicolas Esposito <3dv...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I've used Agisoft Photoscan for both small models and entire rooms
>> What I usually do ( for small objects ) is to do a 360° video using my
>> DSLR, then convert it to jpg, load the images ( not all of them, lets say
>> half or 1/3 of them ) into Agisoft and let the engine process all the
>> images.
>> I usually create alphas directly into the images using the rotoscope tool
>> inside After Effects and "bake" the alpha into the images, so as soon as I
>> improt them they already have the mask applied ( it works best if the
>> background is an even color )
>> For rooms I use the tripod and do a 360° as well and do the same process
>>
>> Depends on the details you would like to achieve you need more/less
>> photos, so just a bit of trial should give you a better understanding of
>> whats going on
>>
>>
>> 2014-02-25 14:01 GMT+01:00 Chris Marshall <chrismarshal...@gmail.com>:
>>
>> Hi All,
>>> Sorry if this has been discussed before. Is there any established
>>> software out there that creates a simple 3d environment model from
>>> photographs? So rather than using laser scanning of buildings, I'm looking
>>> to get simple street models from multiple images. A bit like Photosynth,
>>> but ideally I want a 3d model with textures output in some useable format?
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> Chris
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
> --
>
> Chris Marshall
> Mint Motion Limited
> 029 20 37 27 57
> 07730 533 115
> www.mintmotion.co.uk
>
>


-- 

Chris Marshall
Mint Motion Limited
029 20 37 27 57
07730 533 115
www.mintmotion.co.uk

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