Sebastian Bechtold, S. Krömker, H. Mara, Bettina Kratzmüller
{"title":"Rollouts of Fine Ware Pottery using High Resolution 3D Meshes","authors":"Sebastian Bechtold, S. Krömker, H. Mara, Bettina Kratzmüller","doi":"10.2312/VAST/VAST10/079-086","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A common part of the documentation of archaeological finds is the drawing of so-called rollouts. Rollouts provide a complete and continuous depiction of graphical elements on the surface of rotation-symmetric objects and are especially useful for the iconographic interpretation of figurative vase painting. \n \nIn the past, rollouts were created either by manual drawing or photographically. We propose a new method to generate rollouts in which the tedious process of manual drawing or the disadvantage of having to decide on a specific projection in advance of any photographical process is replaced by the acquisition of a digital coloured surface model using a structured-light 3D scanner. This model is then used to generate high-quality rollouts with arbitrary projection parameters. \n \nTo handle curved vessel profiles, we divide the vessel's surface into multiple segments. Each segment is then approximated with a frustum which serves as a developable auxiliary surface. In the rollout generation process, the vessel's surface is projected onto a frustum's mantle, which is then developed into the image plane. The shape of each frustum is selected in such a way that projection distortions are minimized, but interrelated graphical features like figural friezes are still unrolled in one piece. To control distortion effects in rollouts of non-developable surfaces, we investigated the use of cartographic methods. \n \nA first implementation of our method generates true-to-scale rollouts from meshes provided as PLY files and writes them to a raster image file. Our program uses off-screen OpenGL in combination with tiled rendering to generate high-resolution images which are suited for professional printing. Exemplary results from the Austrian Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum (CVA) project of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien (KHM - Museum of Art History in Vienna) and the Universalmuseum Joanneum Graz (UMJ) are shown.","PeriodicalId":168094,"journal":{"name":"IEEE Conference on Visual Analytics Science and Technology","volume":"62 12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2010-09-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IEEE Conference on Visual Analytics Science and Technology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2312/VAST/VAST10/079-086","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 9
Abstract
A common part of the documentation of archaeological finds is the drawing of so-called rollouts. Rollouts provide a complete and continuous depiction of graphical elements on the surface of rotation-symmetric objects and are especially useful for the iconographic interpretation of figurative vase painting.
In the past, rollouts were created either by manual drawing or photographically. We propose a new method to generate rollouts in which the tedious process of manual drawing or the disadvantage of having to decide on a specific projection in advance of any photographical process is replaced by the acquisition of a digital coloured surface model using a structured-light 3D scanner. This model is then used to generate high-quality rollouts with arbitrary projection parameters.
To handle curved vessel profiles, we divide the vessel's surface into multiple segments. Each segment is then approximated with a frustum which serves as a developable auxiliary surface. In the rollout generation process, the vessel's surface is projected onto a frustum's mantle, which is then developed into the image plane. The shape of each frustum is selected in such a way that projection distortions are minimized, but interrelated graphical features like figural friezes are still unrolled in one piece. To control distortion effects in rollouts of non-developable surfaces, we investigated the use of cartographic methods.
A first implementation of our method generates true-to-scale rollouts from meshes provided as PLY files and writes them to a raster image file. Our program uses off-screen OpenGL in combination with tiled rendering to generate high-resolution images which are suited for professional printing. Exemplary results from the Austrian Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum (CVA) project of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien (KHM - Museum of Art History in Vienna) and the Universalmuseum Joanneum Graz (UMJ) are shown.
考古发现记录的一个常见部分是绘制所谓的展示图。滚动在旋转对称物体的表面上提供了图形元素的完整和连续的描述,对于具象花瓶绘画的图像解释特别有用。在过去,展示是通过手工绘制或摄影创建的。我们提出了一种新的方法来生成铺面,其中手工绘图的繁琐过程或在任何摄影过程之前必须决定特定投影的缺点被使用结构光3D扫描仪获取数字彩色表面模型所取代。然后使用该模型生成具有任意投影参数的高质量展板。为了处理弯曲的容器轮廓,我们将容器表面分成多个部分。然后用一个作为可展开辅助曲面的截锥体来近似每个片段。在rollout生成过程中,容器的表面被投影到截锥体的地幔上,然后将其发展成成像平面。每个截锥体的形状都以这样一种方式选择,即投影失真被最小化,但相互关联的图形特征,如图形条纹,仍然在一个整体中展开。为了控制不可显影曲面的变形效果,我们研究了制图方法的使用。我们方法的第一个实现是从作为PLY文件提供的网格中生成真实比例的滚动,并将其写入光栅图像文件。我们的程序使用屏幕外的OpenGL与平铺渲染相结合来生成适合专业打印的高分辨率图像。展示了维也纳艺术史博物馆(KHM -维也纳艺术史博物馆)和格拉茨大学博物馆(UMJ)的奥地利Vasorum Antiquorum (CVA)项目的示范成果。