3D Scanned Clothing item: Detective Coat
Scanned using photogrammetry this model, Detective Coat makes for fine photorealistic shape and detail. The famous Belgian costume designer, Huis Baeyens, designed the original clothing. They granted Polygonal Miniatures permission for scanning and selling part of their catalog, which consists of roughly 100.000 costumes.
My workflow starts with dressing an in-house designed and 3D printed mannequin with the clothing item. A 10-camera setup captures this item alongside a turntable, Arduino trigger system and 4 flashes. Capturing Reality then processes the resulting images. Self-written Python code controls aligning, meshing, texturing and export. Similar scripts handle rendering and organizing the data. But first, Zbrush cleans the scandata and exports a low and high poly file. Xnormal bakes a normal map from these files, fully automatically, using Python.
A drawback of scandata, in addition to content generated with Marvelous Designer or other design software is that it may contain occluded areas (no texture information), baked shadows and permanent folds. These glitches and shortcomings become apparent in extreme animations and avatar deformation, so use caution.
Multiple file formats are generated:
Zip archive: Detective_Coat-OBJ-Low.zip ~16.68 MB has the following file contents:
Zip archive: Detective_Coat-OBJ-High.zip ~181.31 MB has the following file contents:
Zip archive Detective_Coat_High-Res_Renderings.zip provides 12 Transparant PNG turntable renders, rendered in Marmoset Toolbag.
Autodesk Maya, Reallusion's Character Creator, Poser or DAZ studio can make great renders using this clothing 3D model. Also Marvelous Designer can produce amazing looking cloth simulations using the 'import as garment' function for OBJ files. I hope you put Detective Coat to good use, feel free to contact me with any questions you might have regarding this model. All the best, and enjoy!
Polygonal Miniatures