Position two small reflective spheres near the mark, keep the camera locked, and take a series of photos while moving a handheld light around the hemisphere. Software computes light direction from sphere highlights, generating a relightable model. Explore specular enhancement and diffuse gain rendering modes to amplify shallow cuts. Document lamp positions and exposure settings. Even with modest gear, the interactive result often outperforms any single photograph.
If RTI software feels heavy, you can approximate shape recovery by shooting multiple angles and using lightweight tools to combine shading information. Keep exposure constant, avoid moving the object, and mask backgrounds. The computed normal maps exaggerate relief, revealing letter edges otherwise buried in noise. It’s a pragmatic bridge between simple raking light and full RTI, well suited to quick surveys when time is scarce but clarity matters.
For deep or complex marks—branding irons on curved legs, carved shop cartouches, or stamps near joints—build a 3D model with overlapping images. Proper cross‑polarized lighting helps texture quality. The mesh and texture allow virtual raking and measured profiles. Use scale bars, neutral color targets, and careful masking. Photogrammetry complements RTI by capturing geometry around the inscription, situating it within construction details that reinforce attribution and manufacturing practices.
A gray card photographed in the same light anchors white balance, preventing warm varnish or cool LEDs from masking faint ink. Calibrate once, then synchronize across the set. Subtle tint shifts can hide or reveal brown‑on‑brown details. Keep exposure shy of clipping highlights. Use linear profiles when testing edge visibility, then return to faithful profiles for archival derivatives. Consistency builds trust in every interpretive step you take.
Boost structure where it matters using local contrast tools and CLAHE, which lifts micro‑contrast without blowing global tones. Pair with modest deconvolution or unsharp masking, watching for halos along grain. Dodge and burn selectively to equalize uneven raking. Work non‑destructively with masks and low‑opacity brushes. If the inscription requires proof, export intermediate states so peers can follow decisions and confirm that enhancements respect the original evidence.
Edge detectors like Sobel or Canny can outline letter boundaries otherwise tangled in wood texture. Blend IR and visible frames to separate pigment from substrate, or try principal component analysis on multispectral stacks to concentrate signal. False‑color maps exaggerate differences responsibly when labeled and explained. Always keep a natural‑color reference beside experimental outputs, ensuring viewers can compare interpretations and avoid overconfidence born from striking but misleading images.
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