Perception-based painterly rendering: functionality and interface design

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Date
2006
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Eurographics Association
Abstract
Painterly rendering (non-photorealistic rendering or NPR) aims at translating photographs into paintings with discrete brush strokes, simulating certain techniques (im- or expressionism) and media (oil or watercolour). Recently, our research into visual perception and models of processes in the visual cortex resulted in a new rendering scheme, in which detected lines and edges at different scales are translated into brush strokes of different sizes. In order to prepare a version which is suitable for many users, including children, the design of the interface in terms of window and menu system is very important. Discussions with artists and non-artists led to three design criteria: (1) the interface must reflect the procedures and possibilities that real painters follow and use, (2) it must be based on only one window, and (3) the menu system must be very simple, avoiding a jungle of menus and sub-menus. This paper explains the interface that has been developed.
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@inproceedings{
:10.2312/LocalChapterEvents/siacg/siacg06/053-060
, booktitle = {
SIACG 2006: Ibero-American Symposium in Computer Graphics
}, editor = {
Pere Brunet and Nuno Correia and Gladimir Baranoski
}, title = {{
Perception-based painterly rendering: functionality and interface design
}}, author = {
Nunes, Samuel
and
Almeida, Daniel
and
Brito, Vera
and
Carvalho, Joao
and
Rodrigues, Joao
and
Buf, J. M. Hans du
}, year = {
2006
}, publisher = {
The Eurographics Association
}, ISBN = {
3-905673-60-6
}, DOI = {
/10.2312/LocalChapterEvents/siacg/siacg06/053-060
} }
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