Hi, I'm glad you like the technique! Maybe I will be able to do a tutorial in the future, although as someone still learning the ropes, I'm sure I'm not going about things in the most efficient way here. I've only ever made a few TD networks before and had never scanned anything with a drone before this project, I just followed tutorials online, so would recommend that in the meantime. The process is scanning, then using software like 3DF Zephyr or meshroom to make the point clouds, then rendering point clouds in Touchdesigner (that search term will yield results, I believe the name of the main people who I followed for the point cloud technique was Wylfred Owlsey and supermarket salad), and from there just messing with the network in various ways through trial and error. The network I made is a bit of a spaghetti monster tbh haha, many many cables everywhere, it's a quite messy.
@@final_animal thank u for kind reply . im beginer so i just curious of it. i'll check ur recommend channel :) and i really hope to see ur tutorial in the future . good luck to you! thanks from korea.
@@chaenull3563 thanks a lot! Bileam tepesche and Acrilycode are also great (I recommend doing the Acrilycode beginners course before any other tutorials as they give exercises that force you to understand how to use operators in context, it’s the best one I think). Thanks again for watching! You can see the results of this process in my other videos ❤️from Ireland
@@jojohe5270 hi, thanks very much! I used a dji pro mini 3 to take photographs of the trees (really any drone with a decent camera would do fine for this use case, anything that captures 1080p would probably get similar photos) and then the free trial of 3DF Zephyr to render the photographs into point clouds. I was also using meshroom, am open source software similar to 3DF Zephyr. Great software and free, but about 5 times slower than 3DF Zephyr, either one of them can generate a point cloud like this. Supermarket Salad has a good tutorial on the touchdesigner process.
@@schandrasekaran2810 I used 3DF Zephyr (free trial). Meshroom is free and open source, it would work fine as well. I found it to be much slower in comparison though.
cool!
great ! could u make tutorial of this ? this is too fast to follow it . i wanna do make this too !!
Hi, I'm glad you like the technique! Maybe I will be able to do a tutorial in the future, although as someone still learning the ropes, I'm sure I'm not going about things in the most efficient way here.
I've only ever made a few TD networks before and had never scanned anything with a drone before this project, I just followed tutorials online, so would recommend that in the meantime.
The process is scanning, then using software like 3DF Zephyr or meshroom to make the point clouds, then rendering point clouds in Touchdesigner (that search term will yield results, I believe the name of the main people who I followed for the point cloud technique was Wylfred Owlsey and supermarket salad), and from there just messing with the network in various ways through trial and error.
The network I made is a bit of a spaghetti monster tbh haha, many many cables everywhere, it's a quite messy.
@@final_animal thank u for kind reply . im beginer so i just curious of it. i'll check ur recommend channel :) and i really hope to see ur tutorial in the future . good luck to you! thanks from korea.
@@chaenull3563 thanks a lot! Bileam tepesche and Acrilycode are also great (I recommend doing the Acrilycode beginners course before any other tutorials as they give exercises that force you to understand how to use operators in context, it’s the best one I think). Thanks again for watching! You can see the results of this process in my other videos
❤️from Ireland
hermoso
I'm very impressed with your amazing work! Could you please tell me what equipment or software you use for 3D scanning?
@@jojohe5270 hi, thanks very much! I used a dji pro mini 3 to take photographs of the trees (really any drone with a decent camera would do fine for this use case, anything that captures 1080p would probably get similar photos) and then the free trial of 3DF Zephyr to render the photographs into point clouds. I was also using meshroom, am open source software similar to 3DF Zephyr. Great software and free, but about 5 times slower than 3DF Zephyr, either one of them can generate a point cloud like this. Supermarket Salad has a good tutorial on the touchdesigner process.
@@final_animal this really helps me a lot ! thank you so much
great !
@@song_7175 thanks a lot!
What software is used to document the tree for 3D photogrammetry
@@schandrasekaran2810 I used 3DF Zephyr (free trial). Meshroom is free and open source, it would work fine as well. I found it to be much slower in comparison though.
cool!