Decomposing time-lapse paintings into layers
Jianchao Tan, Marek Dvoroznak, Daniel Sykora, Yotam Gingold
In ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG), 34(4), August 2015.
Abstract: The creation of a painting, in the physical world or digitally, is a process that occurs over time. Later strokes cover earlier strokes, and strokes painted at a similar time are likely to be part of the same object. In the final painting, this temporal history is lost, and a static arrangement of color is all that remains. The rich literature for interacting with image editing history cannot be used. To enable these interactions, we present a set of techniques to decompose a time lapse video of a painting (defined generally to include pencils, markers, etc.) into a sequence of translucent "stroke" images. We present translucency-maximizing solutions for recovering physical (Kubelka and Munk layering) or digital (Porter and Duff "over" blending operation) paint parameters from before/after image pairs. We also present a pipeline for processing real-world videos of paintings capable of handling long-term occlusions, such as the painter's hand and its shadow, color shifts, and noise.
Article URL: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2766960
BibTeX format:
@article{10.1145-2766960,
  author = {Jianchao Tan and Marek Dvoroznak and Daniel Sykora and Yotam Gingold},
  title = {Decomposing time-lapse paintings into layers},
  journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG)},
  volume = {34},
  number = {4},
  articleno = {61},
  month = aug,
  year = {2015},
}
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