For context, my job involves taking 3d scans of furniture and retopping them to a more useable, renderable state. We do not however bring in or use colour scan data due to how a single piece of furniture will have numerous kinds of materials applied to it.
Naturally this is tedious. There are numerous ways to speed things up, with much more efficient tools and software like Topogun etc.
However, when it comes to just overall fully automatic retopping tools these always leave some sort of unsightly, and often unworkable spiralling geometry.
So, to my question above really.
You see so many of these auto-retopping tools and the praises sung by them, but if they constantly give spiralling geometry is this a result that is not actually cared about/effects the workflow? or is there just more work needed to be done from out side in order to make these auto-retopping tools work?
e.g. Are the spirals a non-issue, because of how the diffuse is brought in and baked onto the mesh. Or that they're painted in 3D with the likes of substance and thus weird seam placements are a thing of the past.
Replies
ML is probably the answer to this one. it's an ideally suited problem ...
That of course means you'll be waiting a while for anything decent to show up. Nobody's funding anything useful when there's money to be made generating porn and gathering personal data from users
I've not poked around much in several years but zbrush's guide painting was probably the best way to handle the issue in practice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pg2Nm-fwyME
https://youtu.be/B6tS1nPaFAU?si=Igw-2MZhuHMyj9cn
Houdini quadremesh quality is simplely unusable.
Retopo is really a topic for machine learning to solve, Im surprised nobody has solved that yet since its a very predictable pattern and mostly uses one single data type. Very strange how we can't quad remesh a simple box.
Works pretty well on really difficult hardsurface CAD stuff.
It still cannot even do a straight corner and thats really nasty to fix or barely fixable
Also with this resolution yes, but real hard edge stuff is much worse