MatCap Decomposition for Dynamic Appearance Manipulation
MUÑOZ, Adolfo
Universidad de Zaragoza = University of Zaragoza [Saragossa University] = Université de Saragosse
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Universidad de Zaragoza = University of Zaragoza [Saragossa University] = Université de Saragosse
MUÑOZ, Adolfo
Universidad de Zaragoza = University of Zaragoza [Saragossa University] = Université de Saragosse
< Reduce
Universidad de Zaragoza = University of Zaragoza [Saragossa University] = Université de Saragosse
Language
en
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
This item was published in
Eurographics Symposium on Rendering 2015, 2015-06-24, Darmstadt. 2015
English Abstract
In sculpting software, MatCaps (a shorthand for "Material Capture") are often used by artists as a simple and efficient way to design appearance. Similar to LitSpheres, they convey material appearance into a single image ...Read more >
In sculpting software, MatCaps (a shorthand for "Material Capture") are often used by artists as a simple and efficient way to design appearance. Similar to LitSpheres, they convey material appearance into a single image of a sphere, which can be easily transferred to an individual 3D object. Their main purpose is to capture plausible material appearance without having to specify lighting and material separately. However, this also restricts their usability, since material or lighting cannot later be modified independently. Manipulations as simple as rotating lighting with respect to the view are not possible. In this paper, we show how to decompose a MatCap into a new representation that permits dynamic appearance manipulation. We consider that the material of the depicted sphere act as a filter in the image, and we introduce an algorithm that estimates a few relevant filter parameters interactively. We show that these parameters are sufficient to convert the input MatCap into our new representation, which affords real-time appearance manipulations through simple image re-filtering operations. This includes lighting rotations, the painting of additional reflections, material variations, selective color changes and silhouette effects that mimic Fresnel or asperity scattering.Read less <
Origin
Hal imported