Oh, that would be amazing! The photos are also available and some people definitely take it for a test ride. However.. This dataset with the stacking is far from generic.
The light doesn't need to be completely flat like what you'd do when scanning it more traditionally, for meshing. The problem is when the highlight is sharp and reflects it's surrounding. You could remove it, with cross polarization.. But then it wouldn't look realistic anymore.
There is actually still a Lytro type camera for industrial application available: https://raytrix.de/
Too low res, too expensive for my use case unfortunately.
Thanks! I use the computer only to setup the shot, adjust lighting make test stacks of different angles. If everything is good, I disconnect and capture to the memory stick. During the shooting I only adjust the beginning or end of the rail a bit, so everything is in focus at some point. Triggering (manually) the rotary disk still happens from the computer.
I glue mounted the strawberry on three nails and used pins to secure it.
I have to think about your idea.. I don't think friction would be enough to hold it in place.. it would probably be hard to knot the top onto something too, as that's where the light is: https://i.imgur.com/vIjw6pc.jpeg
But I'm always experimenting with the mounting, thanks for the inputs.
I usually use PostShot.. but the quality was not very good. I want to try LichtFeld but my Graphics Card has too little memory.. so I reached out on twitter, some people ran tests and Mykhailo got some better quality out of it so I took his training. You can d/l the COLMAP dataset for free and try yourself.
My take.. at a macro scale, the dof is usually so small, that it's hard to get a reliably track. So you'd need some sort of way to tell that these stacked photos belong into a series, and then you sort of are doing focus stacking :-)
I do think the alignment algorithm could be improved. Maybe the approaches I linked could be used to make a much more robust focus stacking algorithm, that also corrects for 3D geometry. That would be really cool!
It's an artefact unfortunately. Gaussian splats have no concept of refraction and have a hard time dealing with reflection. Highlights, usually so so. Something I always wrangle.
I have done 2x macro (an ant).. and want to try 5x.. but as you get closer, the depth of field becomes really shallow. You can do focus stacking but you risk that the individual areas in focus are less ideal aligned and the tracking can't make any sense out of the geometry anymore.