3D-Reconstruction of an Egyptian coffin lid from the Third Intermediate Period (21st-25th dynasties)

For the Module Assessment ‘3D Documentation and Modelling’ as part of the course of study ‘Archaeoinformatics’ at the University of Cologne, I was tasked with the following assignments:

The Institute of Egyptology of the University of Cologne wants to present some of the finds in their collection to a wider audience in an online exhibition. Besides photos and texts, the Institute also wants to present some 3D models and reconstructions, of which you should prepare only one. As the object is very fragile and cannot be accessed easily, the curator of the collection already made photos of the object in question (provided as 120 DNG files, 5,15 GB). Your task is to create a 3D model of the provided photos and reconstruct the missing parts in a second step. The object in question is an Egyptian coffin lid. As the curator is very busy, it is your task to find suitable templates for reconstruction and the necessary literature. You have just a small selection of literature to start you off.

The first Task was to create a digital 3D object from the provided photos via Structure from Motion (SfM).

Image provided by Sebastian Hagenauer, University of Cologne

For this task I’ve used the software Agisoft Metashape Professional 1.6.0 (the successor of Photoscan from the same company). After going through the photos by hand to sort out blurred and therefore misleading ones (ca. 7 photos), I’ve opened them via Adobe Bridge in Adobe Camera RAW to colour correct them with the accompanying colour chart on the side of the artefact and also corrected the perspective with the saved lens meta data in the .DNG image-files. With these corrected and as high-quality saved JPG-files, I’ve started the SfM-process in Metashape.

The resulting digital 3D object below was achieved by the following steps with these settings:

1. Align Photos: High Quality instead Highest Quality because the base photos weren’t sharp enough to justify the extra time and hard drive space with the up scaling by the factor 4 of the highest quality. Generic preselection was also used.

2. Cleaning unnecessary points of the background and below the artefact.

3. Build Dense Cloud: High quality (processing of original photo size) because I own a PC with enough power to make this calculation in a sufficient time (but also cost roughly 7 hours). Also, the mild depth filtering mode was used. Note: using Ultra High quality has crashed after 7 hours. Second cleaning of unnecessary points

4. Build Mesh: Arbitrary surface type with the dense point cloud as source for a high-quality mesh. Two different versions: one with interpolation enabled to fill most of the gaps but missing a big hole on the right side (s. below). The other version with interpolation set to Extrapolated to close all gaps. The extrapolated approach gave a very good result and therefore this 3D-object is used further on (s. below). Both versions are generated with high and medium face count. High for the final renderings and medium to work on the reconstruction.

5. Build Texture: Standard settings (Diffuse map, Generic mapping mode, Mosaic blending mode) with a texture size of 8192×8192 pixels. Both advanced settings were set (hole filling and ghosting filter). Additional creation of Ambient Occlusion maps for later renderings.

6. Find Targets (for the scale): the artefact was pictured fitted with calibrated photogrammetric non coded cross-scales from Cultural Heritage Imaging, which centers are 18cm apart, accompanied by another 5cm-rectangle-scale with 1cm resolution. In Metashape you can detect markers on the photos and therefore on the 3D-SfM-Model automatically with these non-coded cross-scales following their guide. After this you can add scales in Metashape and manually add the known distance between the markers. I’ve used lcm, 3cm, and 18cm on all four iterations of the SfM-model, leaving one scale empty to test the accuracy (s. guide above). The scale-error is 0,000018 – 0,000008m (18 – 9μm), so they are pretty accurate.

7. Export. As final step in Metashape I exported the models and textures to long-term storage data formats (COLLADA .dae and Baseline TIFF), following the advice from the IANUS-project of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI) on favoured long-term data storage.

8. Import in Cinema 4D: To align the scans on the X,Y and Z-axes and easier post processing cleaning I’ve imported them into Cinema 4D. Now that the SfM-models are prepared for the reconstruction, I also exported both version to .glb following the recommendations of kompakkt.de for presenting them online easier (kompakkt.de is a file hosting service created by the Department of Digital Humanities at the University of Cologne which also integrate meta data and on-object annotations).

3D reconstruction I. Requirements, finding sources and brief history

We now have our primary source (the artefact) as digital 3D object to build upon. The next step is to search for comparable artefacts (same or similar time and region) so that we get clues and an idea how the final reconstruction has to look and don’t have to work with just our imagination in an empty 3D space.

“Even if you follow the rules [of reconstruction], the only certain thing about any reconstruction drawing is… that it is wrong. The only real question is, how wrong is it?” 

James 1997, 25.

Following this statement, we have to achieve a transparent workflow to show our uncertainties and give others a chance to follow our decisions, opening the door for an academic discussion like we are used to with footnotes and citations in papers.

Our primary source is the previously generated 3D scan of the coffin lid fragment. For the secondary sources we have to a quite extend several coffins and coffin lids findings in Northern Upper Egypt. We have to first examine if our fragment could fit into these findings and then if there are common features of Northern Upper Egypt coffins of the 22nd to 25th dynasties we can rely on as sources for our reconstruction. The most extensive recent study on these types of wooden coffins were made by John H. Taylor in 2009 (see below).

In Egypt a major shift in power and structure happened at the end of the 20th dynasty and the New Kingdom with the death of Ramses XI and the beginning of the Third Intermediate Period (around 1069 BCE; see also Taylor 2010, 220f. for a political overview). This was also marked with a change in the burial tradition: stone sarcophagi were no longer used and with the 22nd dynasty, the previously used highly decorated yellow wooden coffin (esp. Theban Elites) were discarded and replaced by much less elaborated decorations. Also, the full cartonnage body container around the mummy was introduced (see. Cooney 2015, 285).

Taylor sums up the 21st dynasty coffins style as following:

In the 21st Dynasty […] the vast majority of the evidence for elite burials comes from Thebes. […] All the examples are anthropoid cases, brilliantly painted in polychrome on a yellow or white ground, with a strong yellow varnish. The hands are represented crossed on the chest and often holding djed and tit amulets. […] the surfaces are divided into rectilinear compartments and densely filled with detailed vignettes and groups of divine figures and emblems […] Interior as well as exterior surfaces are routinely painted […].

Taylor 2009, 376 on Background: the New Kingdom and the 21st Dynasty

Between the 22nd and early 25th Dynasties the contrast in the design of the coffins between Southern Upper Egypt and Northern Upper Egypt and to the ones used in the 21st Dynasty is rather drastic:

Theban elite burials of the 22nd to early 25th Dynasties usually comprised one or two anthropoid wooden coffins containing a cartonnage mummy-case. The wooden coffins skilfully reproduce the shape of the mummy and have a sculptured, three-dimensional quality. The head and projecting footcase are carefully modelled, but (with a few exceptions) arms and hands are not represented . The decoration of these outer coffins sometimes features figures of deities in registers and compartments […] but often the adornment consists of little more than single lines of inscription on the lid and the coffin case and a large figure of a goddess on the interior. The background colouring is often black, yellow or reddish, but frequently the natural colour of the wood is left exposed.

Taylor 2009, p. 378 on 22nd to early 25th Dynasty: Southern Upper Egypt

The burials typically comprise one or two anthropoid coffins of wood […]. The decoration of the coffins is restricted to the exterior and usually to the lid alone. Here the only parts regularly decorated are the face, the wig, the collar, the hands, and a central inscription, sometimes with decorative borders and often with a recumbent jackal above.

Taylor 2009, p. 379 on Northern Upper Egypt and Delta coffins, 22nd to early 25th Dynasty

Also, these Northern Upper Egypt coffins are often rather simple or ‘crude’ made with partially garbled inscription which often led Egyptologists and archaeologists to date these coffins in Ptolemaic or Roman eras (Taylor 2009, 379).

Whereas the wooden coffins from southern Upper Egypt were carefully sculpted, reproducing the shape of the mummified body from head to foot, the modelling of the human form on the northern coffins was done in a simpler fashion. Only the head, shoulders and hands were distinctly represented. The coffin lids are generally flat, with only thin strips of wood attached along the outer edges to create a slight concavity, and they lack the carefully shaped, protruding foot-case which is typical of coffins from southern sites.

Taylor 2009, p. 386 on Conspectus of Stylistic Features of Coffins from Northern Upper Egypt

These information give us a strong hint that our coffin lid fragment could fit into the Northern Upper Egypt coffin-types from the 22nd to 25th Dynasties: hands are visible and if you look closely at the (worn) surface, just the wig, the collar between the lappets of the wig, the back of the hands and the face are decorated. These can be supported further with more details.

Image provided by Sebastian Hagenauer, University of Cologne

Bibliography

K. M. Cooney (2015), Coffins, Cartonnage, and Sarcophagi, in: M. K. Hartwig (ed.), A Comapnion o Ancient Egyptian Art (Chichester), 269–292.

S. James (1997), Drawing Inferences. Visual Reconstruction in Theory and Practice, in: B.L. Molyneaux (ed.), Cultural Life of Images. Visual Representation in Archaeology, (Oxfordshire), 22–48.

J.H. Taylor (2009), Coffins as evidence for a ‘north-south divide’ in the 22nd-25th dynasties, in: G.P.F. Broekman/R.J. Demarée/O.E. Kaper (edd.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and cultural studies into the 21st-24th dynasties: Proceedings of a conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Leiden), 375–415.

J.H. Taylor (2010), Changes in the Afterlife, in: W. Wendrich (ed.), Egyptian Archaeology (Chichester), 220–240.

3D reconstruction II. Laying out the reconstruction and features of the final model

We are now pretty sure that our fragment belongs to a 22nd to 25th Dynasties, Northern Upper Egypt coffin, which will become certain if we look further into John H. Taylor’s descriptions, esp. on head and shoulder, but also at the hands:

Taylor describes that the coffins are featuring faces in small proportions to the rest of the body, often with very broad wigs of tripartite form. They are coloured red, yellow or cream-white with black and white eyes and black or blue eyebrows (Taylor 2009, 387 on Iconographic features). Nearly all of these features can be found in our scanned lid fragment: small face, broad wig, black and white eyes, black eyebrows – just the face colour is hard to determine. It seems to be cream-white was the colour used like seen between the eyebrows, in the upper right corner of the left eye or on the dowels (not to be mistaken with the scratched plaster at the chin or middle of the left eyebrow for example). The hands are another highly distinctive feature which fit our lid:

Hands: Crossed hands appear on many of the coffin lids. They were separately carved from wood and were attached to the main lid-planks. The arms are usually not represented . The consistent depiction of the hands is one of the main differences between the northern and southern coffins of the 22nd-25th Dynasties […]. Another highly distinctive feature of the northern coffins is the decoration of the back of the hands. […] they are usually partly covered by patterning, consisting of rows of stylised beads like those in the collars, or a chequered design. These designs often extend from the wrist to the root of the thumb (or close to it). Naville saw in them a resemblance to ‘gloves made of net-work’, although they do not cover the fingers.

Taylor 2009, pp. 388 f. on Iconographic features (Hands).

Especially on the left hand the chequered net-pattern reaching to the thumb root can be seen very good – also that there are no arms represented. With all these strong evidence to place our lid into the category of 22nd to 25th Dynasties Northern Upper Egypt coffins, we can now have a further look into the construction and features of these coffins to determine the features our reconstructed lid and case have to include.

Construction of wooden Coffins (from Northern Upper Egypt, 22nd-25th Dynasty)

The anthropoid coffins were typically made from small pieces of thin wood, held together with dowels. Whereas the wooden coffins from southern Upper Egypt were carefully sculpted, reproducing the shape of the mummified body from head to foot, the modelling of the human form on the northern coffins was done in a simpler fashion. Only the head, shoulders and hands were distinctly represented. The coffin lids are generally flat, with only thin strips of wood attached along the outer edges to create a slight concavity, and they lack the carefully shaped, protruding foot-case which is typical of coffins from southern sites. On most of the northern coffins the feet are not represented at all, though a flat projecting footboard is occasionally encountered. The cases of the northern coffins are deeper than the lids, but these cases too were technically simple in construction, with straight sides positioned at an oblique angle from the shoulders to the foot end . An attempt was sometimes made to give a curved shape to the canopy, but the skilfully modelled bodily contours typical of Theban coffins are generally absent. A particularly noticeable difference in construction between the two groups is the fact that the lids of the northern coffins were secured to their cases by four or six mortise and tenon joints, in contrast to the eight sockets regularly found on Theban examples.

Taylor 2009, p. 386 on Conspectus of Stylistic Features of Coffins from Northern Upper Egypt

With this description the reconstructed coffin should feature:

  • head, shoulders and hands as human features (covered by our SfM-model)
  • lid with flat surface, slight concave and without footcase (following contour of SfM-model)
  • deep case, simple constructed with straight sides, angled sides from shoulder to foot end (foot end width narrower than shoulder width)
  • four to six tenons and mortises as joints (two seen at the height of the hand positions in the SfM-model)

Detailed features of the lid

The surfaces of the wooden coffins have only sparse decoration. The cases are devoid of images and inscriptions and only the exterior surfaces of the lids are decorated. The area below the wig and collar on these lids is sometimes completely plain. On the majority of specimens the main feature is an inscription in a single vertical line, positioned in the centre of the lid and occasionally framed by borders. A recumbent jackal is regularly painted at the top of this inscription, and indeed this image is one of the most typical iconographic features of the northern coffins, and one which continues in use after the Third Intermediate Period. […]On Theban coffins, in contrast, the axial text begins either directly below the collar or below a solar disc, a winged scarab or a winged goddess.

Taylor 2009, pp. 389 f. on Iconography of body fields.
  • sparse decoration
  • only decoration on the exterior of the lid
  • plain area below wig and hands (as indicated by our SfM-model)
  • one vertical inscription with recumbent jackal on top

Features of the case

The cases are devoid of images and inscriptions and only the exterior surfaces of the lids are decorated.

Taylor 2009, p. 389 on Iconography of body fields.
  • plain wooden case

Colouring

The painted details of face, wig and collar on the wooden coffins are usually executed on a layer of plaster. Frequently, this does not extend over the rest of the surface, and on several of the coffins the rest of the ground is unpainted. […] The wigs and collars are polychrome, in which red, green, blue, black and white predominate. There is usually no varnish over the paint. Inscriptions are generally in blue or black.

Taylor 2009, pp. 392 f. on Colouration and graphic style.
  • plaster on face, wig and collar, rest optional. For us: just on these parts (see SfM-Model, esp. the space between the wigs and hands)
  • rest could be left unpainted. For us: painted directly on wood (see SfM-model, directly behind the right hand the peeled paint and wood below)
  • from our lid: colour some kind of darker creme-white, nearly like khaki-coloured
  • black or blue inscription

Inscription

On the northern coffins there is generally only one inscription, which is located in the centre of the lid or on the front of the cartonnage case. The texts usually begin with either the Htp di nsw or dd mdw in formula, and are addressed frequently to Osiris, Anubis, Re-Horakhty or Ptah-Sokar- Osiris.

Taylor 2009, p. 391 on Inscriptions.
  • optional addition of this kind of inscription as texture

Measurements

Taylor gives no information on the size, esp. the depth of the case. Jonathan P. Elias and Carter Lupton published 2019 a study on two coffins which are coming from Northern Upper Egypt but are 200 – 400 years younger than our coffin and coffin-types. Since this is the only indication I could find, I will still use their measurement of the depths (c. 35cm and c. 38cm) as a rough indicator. Their coffins were larger; therefore I will go with around 30cm as depth.

Bibliography

J.P. Elias/C. Lupton (2019), Regional identification of Late Period coffins from Northern Upper Egypt, in: H. Strudwick/J. Dawson (edd.), Ancient Egyptian Coffins. Past – Present – Future (Havertown/Oxford), 175–184.

J.H. Taylor (2009), Coffins as evidence for a ‘north-south divide’ in the 22nd-25th dynasties, in: G.P.F. Broekman/R.J. Demarée/O.E. Kaper (edd.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and cultural studies into the 21st-24th dynasties: Proceedings of a conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Leiden), 375–415.

3D reconstruction III. Preparing the workspace and blocking out the coffin lid

I’m modelling the reconstruction in Cinema 4D R20 Education. In the first step I’ve imported the SfM-model into Cinema 4D and added the previously chosen reference image to the top-view.

Modelling decisions for the lid

Following the contour of a coffin from Sedment (Taylor 2009, 407, tab VI) because the overall style and shape of the larger one (esp. hands, small face – large wig, painting on hand, no further decoration seen below hands, slight rounded sides) fits our lid fragment pretty well.

Ahnas Prints 015

Taylor 2009, 407, tab. VI: Cartonnage case with lids of outer and intermediary coffins from Sedment, 22nd-25th Dynasty, c. 945-700 BC. Intermediary coffin and cartonnage now Greenock, McLean Museum and Art Gallery 1987.394-5. (Photo courtesy Egypt Exploration Society).

Modelling decisions for the case

Using roughly the case from Taylor 2009, 406, tab V as reference because of the position of the tenons on our lid and the mortises on this case on the height of the hands. I’m using six tenons but four would also be possible (as we don’t have images from below our lid fragment to proof if there are two more mortises cut into the frame on the height of the face, no decision based on the fragment can been done). Most important is that aren’t eight connections used like, because they are a distinctive feature on Theban-style cases (see previous blog entry).

Ahnas Prints 012

Taylor 2009, 406, tab. V: Coffin and cartonnage case from Sedment, 22nd-25th Dynasty, c. 945-700 BC. Current location unknown. (Photo courtesy Egypt Exploration Society).

Modelling techniques for the lid outlines

  1. Drawing the outlines of a coffin lid half with linear splines along the reference image below the hands, above along the 3D scanned lid fragment (NB: fitting also to the 3D scan to get the right outlines of the coffin case).
  2. Extruding along y-axis with nearly the thickness of the wood boards (side edges will be bevelled at a later point), comparing the fit of the modelled coffin lid with the head fragment and making slight adjustments where necessary.
  3. Making backups.
  4. Rounding of the edges of the linear spline with selecting all points (without the two on the vertical half and lowest points for preserving straight edges there) and using the Round-tool.
  5. These steps back and forth until satisfied.

Modelling techniques for the first lid detailing and fitting to the 3D scan

Overall achievements needed for this step: Bringing the modelled board to the right thickness, bevelling of the outside edges, adding curvature to left board – following the shape of the SfM-model – flat foot section, as stated previously.

  1. Duplicating the extruded left side of the lid and mirroring it along the vertical edge to build the right side of the lid.
  2. Adjusting the width while preserving the shape, fitting it to the 3D scan and reference image.
  3. Since the right wood board is mostly flat and not curved convex like the left outer one: bringing the right plank to the same depth of the SfM-model and according to it the left half onto the same (curvature will be added separately).
  4. Merging both halves together, setting the edges where the halves were joined to the object-relative middle-point with switching to object(Rel)-positions. With this step these edges are also on the vertical middle axis of the 3D scanned lid fragment.
  5. Backups.
  6. Duplicating the non-bevelled lid to build the frame under the wood planks of the lid later on, which are nearly square in diameter (except on the outside following the wig-curvature).
  7. Slight rounding of the lower (foot) edge following the picture and for a more natural shape.
  8. First bevelling of the edges, cutting of the head part of the reconstructed lid since it is depicted by the SfM-model itself.
  9. Fitting the edges of reconstructed lid and SfM-model together.
  10. Bringing the frame part on the height of the visible squared timber of the scan, with an inner extrude on the thickness (based mainly on the scan, but also on a Late Period coffin lid, see Zygalski 2019, 146)
  11. Removing the innermost polygons to get a square diameter. With the frame as reference, deleting all polygons of the SfM-model below this frame (except the tenons).

Bibliography

J.H. Taylor (2009), Coffins as evidence for a ‘north-south divide’ in the 22nd-25th dynasties, in: G.P.F. Broekman/R.J. Demarée/O.E. Kaper (edd.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and cultural studies into the 21st-24th dynasties: Proceedings of a conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Leiden), 375–415.

A. Zygalski (2019), A coffin lid of an unidentified person from the Late Period. Observations on the wood and construction, in: H. Strudwick/J. Dawson (edd.), Ancient Egyptian Coffins. Past–Present–Future (Havertown/Oxford), 145–156.

3D reconstruction IV. Adding details

Modelling techniques for creating the case, tenons and mortises

  1. Duplicating the frame and extend it ca. 25cm to build the straight sides of the case (measurements from previously blog entry – 30cm – minus approx. 5cm for the frame).
  2. Adding the back plate by just copying the un-detailed backup of the lid and placing it below the sides.
  3. Cutting out the polygons between the lower end (foot) of the coffin, to resemble the construction out of several wood pieces like in plate V, the same for the pieces above the shoulders.
  4. Adding a little bit of space to these cuts to see them better in later renderings.
  5. Creating the tenons based on the two from the SfM-model (only height and length can be derived from it, depth can be estimated to some extend from the front diameter of the square frame wood pieces in comparison with tenons depicted in pictures of coffins by Taylor 2009).
  6. Duplicating and placing them in the fashion like plate V
  7. Using Boolean operator to cut the mortises into the case walls.

Bibliography

J.H. Taylor (2009), Coffins as evidence for a ‘north-south divide’ in the 22nd-25th dynasties, in: G.P.F. Broekman/R.J. Demarée/O.E. Kaper (edd.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and cultural studies into the 21st-24th dynasties: Proceedings of a conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Leiden), 375–415.

3D reconstruction V. rounding the model up

Modelling techniques for more lid detailing

The overall shape of the coffin and lid is now done to the extend what can be achieved based on secondary sources of similar chronology and region.

Important: there are no fragments of the original case for this lid left, this is a full reconstruction based only on similar coffins.

The lid will now be edited to fit more to the existing fragment. We can see on the 3D scan at least three different boards forming the lid. The middle one could probably divide once more behind the left hand, but to me it seems like a natural breaking in comparison to the straight cut in front of the left hand. Most of the other presented coffin lids by Taylor 2009 have also three planks which are showing similar breaks.

  • Dividing the lid into more pieces by drawing a spline and cutting alongside it. NB: the form of the cuts is only to some degree certain directly towards the SfM-Model; downwards to the feet this comes from my interpretation based to some extend on the images provided by Taylor 2009 of other coffin lids.
  • Fitting the now three pieces to match the shapes to the ones of our lid (esp. the left one with the convex shape).

Modelling techniques for overall little detailing

This step is only based on my own interpretation and creativity to round the overall image a little bit up, mostly to break some of the hard edges and making the flat edges a little wobbly to give them a more natural feel like the lid above. The same with the frame-piece.

For the final renderings the 3D scan has to be prepared in this way that it does not stick out of the reconstruction model and no holes are visible. Therefore, I’m also deleting the two tenons cause they are not distinctive enough in the scan to get them integrated right while fitting the overall look. Closing the big hole on the back of the headpiece using one of the backup lids. For the frame, dragging the points of it to snuggle fit to the scanned frame and restoring some minor damages in the frame of the scan to guarantee its fit onto the case.

Texturing

The coffin case will be made from plain wood, as previously stated following Taylor. On the lid we can still see the wooden structure of the planks but also that they are covered with a thin layer of somewhat creme-white/khaki coloured paint. The Texture will contain these two details, but I won’t use more (like damages or dowels) to obtain the contrast between reconstruction and scan. The textures will be using PBR-materials (physical based rendering) made with Adobe Substance Painter 2019.3.3.

Since we don’t have further information about the used wood for the coffin lid, I’ll be using wood with long, even and fine grain as seen on the uncovered parts. These properties are described by Cooney 2015, 274 for cedar, but this has to be analysed by a dendrologist further to give a definitive statement.

  1. Creating and editing the UV-coordinated texture maps in Cinema 4D for telling the application where to put a 2D-image on the 3D-object-surface.
  2. Exporting and loading the case and lid into Substance Painter.
  3. Using the Wood Walnut material because it has a fine and even base structure; further fitting and editing of this material for our needs.
  4. Editing colour to fit to the wood colour from our scanned lid (reference points to extract the colour values are behind the right hand and on the frame – Substance Painter allows to use its colour selection tool outside of the Substance Painter window which makes this part quite easy).
  5. Export all maps in separate files to use them as textures in Cinema 4D (e.g. base colour map for the colour and flat details, normal map for the depth information: here the wood grain).
  6. Adding another layer on top of the wood material to simulate a thin layer of paint for the lid. The Artificial Leather material gives a nice some kind of rough structure as starting point. Important: the wood grain has to be visible though the ‘paint’ layer later on; achieved by using lower opacity and the wood grain normal map.
  7. Export as a second texture-set.
  8. Creating of two materials (case_wood and lid_wood_paint) and giving them the exported maps to the right channels.
  9. Editing the colour till satisfied.

Inscription

To include all features of a coffin from this period, I’ve also added an inscription to the lid. It was taken from an image used by Taylor, 2009, 404, tab. III of a coffin lid from this region and period (Lahun). This serves only as a visual placeholder/clue but this inscription includes all of the main characteristics written on these coffins: recumbent jackal, dark color, framed and somehow untidy carried out.

Most of the inscriptions of coffins from this period and region started with the opening phrase ḥtp dì nsw (an offering which the king gives) followed by the name of a deity; in this example Ptah-Sokar-Osiris. This is here also followed by the epithet ḥḳꜣ ꜥnḫw (ruler of the living) of Osiris. See also Taylor 2009, 391f. and Bussmann 2017, 10ff. I would particularly like to thank my special friend Julia for helping with the hieroglyps.

The inscription was taken from its background via Adobe Photoshop CC 2020 and converted to a vector image in Adobe Illustrator CC 2020 to scale it up without quality losses to nearly 4k. After this, I created an alpha and texture image (as raster image, because Substance Painter only accept these) and painted the inscription as a pattern onto the above created texture in Substance Painter.

Bibliography

R. Bussmann (2017), Complete Middle Egyptian. A New Method for Understanding Hieroglyphs (London).

K. M. Cooney (2015), Coffins, Cartonnage, and Sarcophagi, in: M. K. Hartwig (ed.), A Comapnion o Ancient Egyptian Art (Chichester), 269–292.

J.H. Taylor (2009), Coffins as evidence for a ‘north-south divide’ in the 22nd-25th dynasties, in: G.P.F. Broekman/R.J. Demarée/O.E. Kaper (edd.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and cultural studies into the 21st-24th dynasties: Proceedings of a conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Leiden), 375–415.

3D reconstruction VI. Final object and final thoughts

The final images are rendered with the default rendering engine of Cinema 4D with settings for physical rendering (since PBR materials are used) and physical lights on 4K resolution.

The reconstructed size of the coffin is 56,5cm wide, 196,7cm tall and 37cm deep.

3D scanned artefact

Finished 3D reconstruction

3D reconstruction with animation

I hope these blog posts has shown what a big help and opportunity 3D documentation and reconstruction can offer in the visual understanding of archaeological artefacts. They are offering the interaction with archaeological finds and sites from around every part of the world and have the potential to supplement traditional archaeological documentation methods – and to replace them in the near future.

But with all these positive aspects, I hope I’ve made it clear enough, how much work has to be put into a virtual reconstruction. On the one side you clearly need the training to work with a 3D software. This will take time and it will be a rough path to get finally along with them; but once you have learned all the techniques it will become much easier and more trivial. On the other side it is much more important how you made the reconstruction from the point of used sources and academic habit.

Many reconstructions don’t come with a thoroughly made documentation so that you can’t follow the steps and decisions made in the reconstruction process after on. But this point is vital for academic discussions and works. We have to think of it as ordinary footnotes and citations like they are used in academic papers and monographs. With these steps it is 1st clear and transparent how you as modeler got to your results and 2nd give your reconstruction a scientific value beyond the sole visual representation, since other scholars can start to discuss about it based on actual sources and interpretations published by you (a key value of academic habit and work). Such a model or reconstruction can then also be used for further research (e.g. light or view-shed analysis) without trusting this reconstruction blindly but with a more solid and transparent foundation. Sure, it takes at least the same amount of time you used for creating the 3D model (for me much more since I’m quite experienced with the modelling aspect itself), but the outcome will be from much more scientific and long-term value.

Therefore, I would like to ask everyone constructing or commission a virtual 3D reconstruction to include to some extend such a documentation. Thank you for following this blog.