The final progress beyond the state of the art, has been to demonstrate for the first time, the easy 3D reconstruction of transaprent objects without the use of any spray overcoating, with cheap and affordable RGB cameras for data collection that anyone can use. The process is very simple and data acquisition is under 2 minutes per item.
A patent is being submitted which is expected to lead to the commercialization of the technology and provide an easy-to-use 3D scanning system which can be leveraged by curators to mass-digitize sensitive glass objects of cultural heritage which are at risk of being lost due to decay, terrorist attack and natural disasters.
The creation of a practical, easy, cheap and fast digitization process for preserving Europe’s glass cultural heritage will eventually facilitate the achievement of a holistic online and offline digital repository for documentation, preservation and touristic purposes. The societal impact of facilitating this digital repository will be the deeper knowledge and understanding of European's for their own cultural heritage as well as that of neighboring (and potentially culturally and historically similar countries), therefore promoting friendship, tolerance, international collaboration and contributing towards the ultimate goal of promoting further integration and solidarity between European nations.
In addition to the primary objectives of the project we have found that our technology can also operate on transparent plastic objects. Therefore the creation of new markets for automated quality control of industrial transparent objects will be created, which will add value to European industrial products and improve the bottom line of Europe's GDP.