The ability to customise garments for fit is directly tied to the availability of a comprehensive, accurate set of measurements. To obtain accurate physical measurements, a basic knowledge and set of skills are required that are not often found in the average salesperson at a retail clothing outlet. The development of three‐dimensional body‐scanning technologies may have significant potential for use in the apparel industry, particularly for customisation or mass customisation strategies to be employed. The purpose of this study was to review all the 3D body scanning systems currently available and to determine the underlying principles that allow these systems to work. Specifications of each system were compared in order to provide some direction for further research into the integration of these systems with current apparel CAD pattern design or pattern generation technologies.
[1]
K. Kaufmann.
Invasion of the body scanners
,
1997
.
[2]
Hein A.M. Daanen,et al.
Whole body scanners
,
1998
.
[3]
Cynthia L. Istook,et al.
Body scanning: The effects of subject respiration and foot positioning on the data integrity of scanned measurements
,
2002
.
[4]
Peng Li,et al.
Format for human body modelling from 3‐D body scanning
,
1995
.
[5]
Peng Li,et al.
Automated Extraction of Anthropometric Data from 3D Images
,
2000
.
[6]
Steven Paquette,et al.
3D scanning in apparel design and human engineering
,
1996,
IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications.