Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

[ home · search · about · links · contact · rss ] [ submit bibtex ] [ BookCite · NPR Books ]

User:

Pass:

Found 37 item(s) authored in "1999".
Pages [4]: Previous Page [1] [2] [3] [4]

Technical Report Surface Drawing
Steven Schkolne, Peter Schröder.
Caltech Department of Computer Science, No. CS-TR-99-03, 1999. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Teddy: A Sketching Interface for 3D Freeform Design
Takeo Igarashi, Satoshi Matsuoka, Hidehiko Tanaka.
SIGGRAPH 99, 1999. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Texture Control in Digital Halftoning
Oleg Veryovka.
University of Alberta, 1999. [BibTeX]

Proceedings View-dependent Geometry
Paul Rademacher.
SIGGRAPH '99, pp. 439--446, 1999. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Visualizing Knowledge about Virtual Reconstructions of Ancient Architecture
Thomas Strothotte, Maic Masuch, Tobias Isenberg.
Computer Graphics International (CGI'99), pp. 36--43, Canmore, Alberta, Canada, 1999. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Visualizing Multivalued Data from 2D Incompressible Flows Using Concepts from Painting

Author(s): Haralambos Marmanis, R. Michael Kirby, David H. Laidlaw.
Proceedings: Visualization 1999, 1999.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
We present a new visualization method for 2d flows which allows us to combine multiple data values in an image for simultaneous viewing. We utilize concepts from oil painting, art, and design as introduced in [1] to examine problems within fluid mechanics. We use a combination of discrete and continuous visual elements arranged in multiple layers to visually represent the data. The representations are inspired by the brush strokes artists apply in layers to create an oil painting. We display commonly visualized quantities such as velocity and vorticity together with three additional mathematically derived quantities: the rate of strain tensor (defined in section 4), and the turbulent charge and turbulent current (defined in section 5). We describe the motivation for simultaneously examining these quantities and use the motivation to guide our choice of visual representation for each particular quantity. We present visualizations of three flow examples and observations concerning some of the physical relationships made apparent by the simultaneous display technique that we employed.

Proceedings Volumetric Modeling of Colored Pencil Drawing
Saeko Takagi, Masayuki Nakajima, Issei Fujishiro.
7th Pacific Conference on Computer Graphics and Applications (PG'99), pp. 250--258, Seoul, Korea, October 05 - 07, 1999. [BibTeX]

Visitors: 190185