http://www.autodesk.com/products/recap/overview
On Tue, Feb 25, 2014 at 9:15 AM, Daniel G <[email protected]> wrote: > Autodesk ImageModeler (2009?) would be another option, if you want precise > rectilinear/architectural stuff. Unfortunately AD saw fit to discontinue > it... > > > On Tue, Feb 25, 2014 at 7:45 AM, Chris Marshall <[email protected] > > wrote: > >> Thanks all, >> Yes I thought looking at the spec of each that the standard version would >> do the job. >> >> Cheers >> >> >> >> On 25 February 2014 13:38, adrian wyer <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> you don't need pro, its for GIS users >>> >>> >>> >>> standard is just fine >>> >>> >>> >>> all of FBFX and Infinite Realities body scans are done with agisoft >>> >>> >>> >>> a >>> >>> >>> ------------------------------ >>> >>> *From:* [email protected] [mailto: >>> [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *Chris Marshall >>> *Sent:* 25 February 2014 13:27 >>> *To:* [email protected] >>> *Subject:* Re: 3d scene from photographs >>> >>> >>> >>> Wow! That's quite some difference between standard and pro versions!! >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On 25 February 2014 13:23, Chris Marshall <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>> >>> Thanks both. I'll check it out. >>> >>> >>> >>> Cheers >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On 25 February 2014 13:14, Nicolas Esposito <[email protected]> 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 <[email protected]>: >>> >>> >>> >>> 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 >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> >> Chris Marshall >> Mint Motion Limited >> 029 20 37 27 57 >> 07730 533 115 >> www.mintmotion.co.uk >> >> >

