I'll bet you're dying to pour over every scrap of that cloth. I can show you, but it would be in between 3300 and 10,000 pieces.
The problem is not one of repeatability:
The scan was 3 hours and took place at three different Z heights. The 2D raster scan of 3,364 images each occurred in between the Z height changes; that is, each change in Z height happened an hour apart, in my very sophisticated setup of binder clips holding it stable. The lights in the room probably went out at one point but I encourage you to look at the image above and see if you can spot a difference.
So the image is stable in the X/Y direction, meaning it shouldn't be a challenge to mix/match clear images, or even stack them. I haven't tried stacking in this setup (it's definitely more stable than my last one, where I had trouble), but the blur sorting qualitatively worked without a hitch. Problem:
The stitching program hates it!!!
Grrr! Argh!!! It's got too many files, or I'm just not mighty enough. It totally knows that it's an image --- the preview looks great!
It's not even that many --- I'm doing a relatively small area. Could get to 10,000 or more, easy. Add that to a very limited commandline API, as well as the weird color effects...
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...which is why to belabor my point, I'm not leaving you hanging without a stitched image. That above is some loose burlap which, as you see, is WHITE. The individual images are all WHITE.
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Microsoft ICE has served me well, but it's desperately time to use or construct a good programmatic solution. I don't care what it's in, OpenCV, Fortran, those little candy ticker tape things. But someone. Heeeelp! 救命! F1!!!
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