3D modelling of trompe l'oeil decorated vaults using dense matching techniques

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Abstract

Dense matching techniques, implemented in many commercial and open source software, are useful instruments for carrying out a rapid and detailed analysis of complex objects, including various types of details and surfaces. For this reason these tools were tested in the metric survey of a frescoed ceiling in the hall of honour of a baroque building. The surfaces are covered with trompe-l'oeil paintings which theoretically can give a very good texture to automatic matching algorithms but in this case problems arise when attempting to reconstruct the correct geometry: in fact, in correspondence with the main architectonic painted details, the models present some irregularities, unexpectedly coherent with the painted drawing. The photogrammetric models have been compared with data deriving from a LIDAR survey of the same object, to evaluate the entity of this blunder: some profiles of selected sections have been extracted, verifying the different behaviours of the software tools.

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Chiabrando, F., Lingua, A., Noardo, F., & Spanò, A. (2014). 3D modelling of trompe l’oeil decorated vaults using dense matching techniques. In ISPRS Annals of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences (Vol. 2, pp. 97–104). Copernicus GmbH. https://doi.org/10.5194/isprsannals-II-5-97-2014

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