Thanks! That can be an issue depending your subject etc. I find photofly has trouble with backgrounds that are all the same color, like an overcast sky, or a white wall. You are better off shooting the subject where the background is variable. Also be sure to shoot enough shots around the object since this is really where it get the edge information. To big a gap and it often gets errors on the edges.
Thanks, I fed Photofly around 50 pics from my Canon Ti2 shot walking around at a high, medium and low angle. So maybe 16 shots each pass. In the end I dumped a few and needed to manually stitch a bunch but considering the output it was minimal effort to make the model. Though the render you see here is done in max rather than the built-in photofly animation tool.
This has been flagged as spam show
Samuel:
Please contact me at scott.sheppard@autodesk.com.
Scott
scottsh115 5 months ago
Thanks! That can be an issue depending your subject etc. I find photofly has trouble with backgrounds that are all the same color, like an overcast sky, or a white wall. You are better off shooting the subject where the background is variable. Also be sure to shoot enough shots around the object since this is really where it get the edge information. To big a gap and it often gets errors on the edges.
samuelconlogue 5 months ago
excellent work, I am have been having issues separating background/ foreground, any advice?
MrSuperJetski 5 months ago
Thanks, I fed Photofly around 50 pics from my Canon Ti2 shot walking around at a high, medium and low angle. So maybe 16 shots each pass. In the end I dumped a few and needed to manually stitch a bunch but considering the output it was minimal effort to make the model. Though the render you see here is done in max rather than the built-in photofly animation tool.
samuelconlogue 6 months ago
Hey, it´s look great. How many photos are needed for make this?
sacrystan 6 months ago