wicq wrote:
I strongly recommend you to put all the cameras at the same height
It may be good for an easy start. But in general, for the good overview of an actor it's better to have variance in camera heights. Low cameras may help for leg/feet tracking, high cameras - for tracking near horizontal poses like push-ups. Certainly, the most suitable cameras placement depends on the kind of motions you gonna capture.
Kyle_butler wrote:
In the actor video I've posted above, you can check my studio set up. Is it too small, perhaps?
The area is a bit small but adequate for the motions you capture. The actor is fully visible in all the cameras, that's enough.
I can note that it would be helpful for tracking if the actor clothes were in more contrast with environment. In the video, his pullover's color is close to the walls, and his pants' color is close to the carpet.
But first we must deal with calibration. It's a pity we cannot do that in a stable environment. When you do the calibration next time, please measure all camera heights, and try to record with lights on. Dim the lights if you can, and select "Darkening" value for "darkening for calibration" option at the setup stage. Provide to us the recorded iPiVideo file and camera heights.