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Hi!
I have a bunch of product photos (sample attached) - warehouse boxes. I need to turn them into series of 360 degree spin photo. All shots are made around 45 degree above perspective plus i have one shot of top and bottom view.
I found the new tool 3D sampler to be advertised as the one, that could turn my photos into 3d object. it would expand my options to use it on further creative processes, however my deadlines are tight, so I don't want to spend too much time, testing it. I'd like to accelarate whole work, not just play and find it's not good enough yet.
I would like to hear from someone who already tested this tool - how accurate it is, are results satysfing, is this a tool that make this particular job for me well?
What are your opinion about it?
Thank you in advance.
Mike
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It work fine for my object. Never try an object like yours. Anyway you need to follow these requirements to get good result,
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Hello buddy, I have tested this 3D capture function many times and I am not sure if the hollowed out object can be achieved. You can also try it. I often encounter some photos that cannot be aligned, and you need to repeatedly modify and retake them, which often depends on whether the photos you take meet the requirements
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Thanks Mate for the answer!
I"m gonna test it after my job will be done, however am a bit sceptic about hollowed out objects. From your experience - what is optimal number of photos to achieve reasonable results? Tens, hundrets? I guess there should be photos from every angle and with more samples there will be better results?
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Late response and likely of no help to the OP, but based on my experience with older 3D object software would it possible to duplicate the object, shrink it a bit, align it horizontally within the original "outside" object, and offset it down so the bottom intersects the "outside" object, then make it negative, the original positive, and group/join/compound the objects into one, which would create a hollow final object? I used to do this in 3D modeling software, and I know that you can do this with 2D compound line paths in Adobe software to create knockouts in artwork.
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