Here is a link to a new website offering high resolution 3D scans for free without copyright restrictions: threedscans.com If you happen to find any of them useful, please do let us know: contact@threedscans.com
I mean rather than photometric, 3d scanning is a more usable tool as it seems. I feel like i read a lot about companies creating complexe assets by hand and 3d scanning them to get all the little stuff in. Also 3d scanning seems to be used big time more and more for face scanning. But still it just changes the workplace…
Ahhhh. I totally forgot about those. I've been caught up in the world of manual painting (Photoshop/Substance) and 3D scans (Texturing.xyz and 3D Scan Store). I'll have to look into how they're set up...
I have a 3D scan, with texture data of a fountain that's been outside my family home. I want to be able to 3d print a replica to make a smaller version I can bring inside, but the scan didn't grab the small details like the brickwork pattern or clothing. I don't have an issue working with mechanical things via cad, but the…
Looks awesome! I'm a bit confused about what the scanned mesh is being used for though? Are you going to bake from the scanned mesh to the high-poly you're mentioning? Or is the scan just functioning as a kind of 3D reference?