Paper
14 March 2007 Painterly rendered portraits from photographs using a knowledge-based approach
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 6492, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XII; 649203 (2007) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.706594
Event: Electronic Imaging 2007, 2007, San Jose, CA, United States
Abstract
Portrait artists using oils, acrylics or pastels use a specific but open human vision methodology to create a painterly portrait of a live sitter. When they must use a photograph as source, artists augment their process, since photographs have: different focusing - everything is in focus or focused in vertical planes; value clumping - the camera darkens the shadows and lightens the bright areas; as well as color and perspective distortion. In general, artistic methodology attempts the following: from the photograph, the painting must 'simplify, compose and leave out what's irrelevant, emphasizing what's important'. While seemingly a qualitative goal, artists use known techniques such as relying on source tone over color to indirect into a semantic color temperature model, use brush and tonal "sharpness" to create a center of interest, lost and found edges to move the viewers gaze through the image towards the center of interest as well as other techniques to filter and emphasize. Our work attempts to create a knowledge domain of the portrait painter process and incorporate this knowledge into a multi-space parameterized system that can create an array of NPR painterly rendering output by analyzing the photographic-based input which informs the semantic knowledge rules.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Steve DiPaola "Painterly rendered portraits from photographs using a knowledge-based approach", Proc. SPIE 6492, Human Vision and Electronic Imaging XII, 649203 (14 March 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.706594
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CITATIONS
Cited by 15 scholarly publications and 4 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Photography

Human vision and color perception

Cameras

Eye

Image segmentation

Image processing

Visual process modeling

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