Hello,
I have an interesting use case and was hoping I could get some advice.
I have a motorized scanner consisting of a USB microscope which moves in one axis (X), and a sample which moves in a perpendicular one (Y), and can rotate in discrete steps. I am first stitching together the 2D scans, which results in what looks like a normal image taken with a camera, and then trying to stitch these together as if I was just taking normal pictures of an object on a turntable (right now, ignoring the ability to Z Stack.)
I was encouraged by some success I had in reconstructing from this set of images (https://drive.google.com/drive/folde...e_hwv?ogsrc=32 , each of these was originally 25 stitched images) , which after masking and editing and such, resulted in this reconstruction: https://sketchfab.com/models/6653825...4a5034244a902b
However, I haven't had any other success. I've tried four other insects. Two beetles are rather monotone black and brown (and glossy), so I can understand that they wouldn't work very well. A bee I dismissed because it was fuzzy, which I imagine would be difficult too. But I just tried some other bug, which I was a bit more optimistic for, since it was nice and colorful and not that hairy... : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uH4...ew?usp=sharing (I was trying to use Z2000).
I have tried masking the outsides and insides between the legs, various scan parameters I could find, but it can't align more than three pictures (which are next to each other), no matter what I do, and about half the time the reconstruction fails. Is it because the image is off-axis (should it be straightened out, referenced against like the tip of the nose?) Should I be playing around with the camera focal length, trying to find the "equivalent" one as if it was a regular camera? Or am I confusing the heck out of the program by using stitched images in the first place? The way I see it, all the information needed to do the reconstruction should be there, right?
I would love to see if anyone more experienced with the software can produce a model.
Thanks,
Wayne
I have an interesting use case and was hoping I could get some advice.
I have a motorized scanner consisting of a USB microscope which moves in one axis (X), and a sample which moves in a perpendicular one (Y), and can rotate in discrete steps. I am first stitching together the 2D scans, which results in what looks like a normal image taken with a camera, and then trying to stitch these together as if I was just taking normal pictures of an object on a turntable (right now, ignoring the ability to Z Stack.)
I was encouraged by some success I had in reconstructing from this set of images (https://drive.google.com/drive/folde...e_hwv?ogsrc=32 , each of these was originally 25 stitched images) , which after masking and editing and such, resulted in this reconstruction: https://sketchfab.com/models/6653825...4a5034244a902b
However, I haven't had any other success. I've tried four other insects. Two beetles are rather monotone black and brown (and glossy), so I can understand that they wouldn't work very well. A bee I dismissed because it was fuzzy, which I imagine would be difficult too. But I just tried some other bug, which I was a bit more optimistic for, since it was nice and colorful and not that hairy... : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uH4...ew?usp=sharing (I was trying to use Z2000).
I have tried masking the outsides and insides between the legs, various scan parameters I could find, but it can't align more than three pictures (which are next to each other), no matter what I do, and about half the time the reconstruction fails. Is it because the image is off-axis (should it be straightened out, referenced against like the tip of the nose?) Should I be playing around with the camera focal length, trying to find the "equivalent" one as if it was a regular camera? Or am I confusing the heck out of the program by using stitched images in the first place? The way I see it, all the information needed to do the reconstruction should be there, right?
I would love to see if anyone more experienced with the software can produce a model.
Thanks,
Wayne
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