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  • what if it is too tight or too loose?

    Also, I am working on a similar project to propose this type of technology for operational purpose rather than retail. What I mean by this is all retailers have a product development cycle, is there any chance this could be used at that stage to reduce product development cost. ?

  • @salnruch Re: too tight or too loose. You can see some examples on our previous video "Real-time cloth simulation and virtual fitting room". when the cloth's too tigh we can detect it ny stretching and pressure data. When it's too loose, one can see it by how the clothes fit, folds, x-ray views, etc.

  • @salnruch RE: is there any chance this could be used at that stage to reduce product development cost?

    ABSOLUTELY

  • Is this technology accurate in terms of a fiiting onto a human body through just a body scan...?

  • @salnruch of course. Use your 3D body scan as your avatar

  • That looks like Optitex draping technology, can you say if it is?

  • @swooshdave no, it's actually our own. 

  • i love this tech but that dress is......

  • Fantastic concept.

  • Excellent!

  • Nice concept, but I think the effect would be more rewarding if you can dynamically replace the computer graphic head with the actual user's head. People could then identify more with the model. Keeping the body CG is okay, and allows you to use te Kinect to track and pose the model, but the head can be subsituted without affecting the draping of clothes.

  • @victorng agree - that we have in mind for the future

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