Texture Transfer Using Geometry Correlation
Tom Mertens, Jan Kautz, Jiawen Chen, Philippe Bekaert and Frédo Durand
In proceedings of Eurographics Symposium on Rendering, Nicosia, Cyprus, June 26-28, 2006.
Abstract
Texture variation on real-world objects often correlates with
underlying geometric characteristics and creates a visually rich
appearance. We present a technique to transfer such geometry-dependent
texture variation from an example textured model to new geometry in a
visually consistent way. It captures the correlation between a set of
geometric features, such as curvature, and the observed diffuse
texture. We perform dimensionality reduction on the overcomplete
feature set which yields a compact guidance field that is used to
drive a spatially varying texture synthesis model. In addition, we
introduce a method to enrich the guidance field when the target
geometry strongly differs from the example. Our method transfers
elaborate texture variation that follows geometric features, which
gives 3D models a compelling photorealistic appearance.
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Acknowledgments
We thank Carlos Hernández Esteban and Francis Schmitt for sharing their 3D models online.
We would like to thank the following people for their help: Jon Chu, Eugene Hsu, Hendrik Lensch, Frank Van Reeth and Tiffany Wang. Bruno Lévy was so kind to provide his mesh parameterization tool (Graphite). Tom Mertens received a research fellowship from the Belgian American Educational Foundation. Part of this work was realized while Tom Mertens was a PhD student at the Expertise Centre for Digital Media (Hasselt University). Jan Kautz was supported in part by an Emmy-Noether fellowship from the German Research Foundation for his stay at MIT. Philippe Bekaert received financial support from the European Regional Development Fund and the Flemish Interdisciplinary Institute for Broadband Communication. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation CAREER award 0447561 "Transient Signal Processing for Realistic Imagery", an NSF Grant No. 0429739 "Parametric Analysis and Transfer of Pictorial Style",
and a Microsoft Research New Faculty Fellowship held by Frédo Durand.
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