Non-Photorealistic Computer Graphics Library

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Found 16 item(s) authored in "1996".
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Technical Report A Resolution-Independent Representation for Pen-and-Ink Illustrations
Michael P. Salisbury, Corin Anderson, Dani Lischinski, David H. Salesin.
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington, No. UW-CSE-96-01-02, 1996. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Assessing the Effect of Non-Photorealistic Rendered Images in CAD
Jutta Schumann, Thomas Strothotte, Andreas Raab, Stefan Laser.
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems: common ground, pp. 35--41, 1996. [BibTeX]

Technical Report Cartoon-Looking Rendering of 3D-Scenes
Philippe Decaudin.
INRIA, Universite de Technologie de Compiegne, No. 2919, France, June, 1996. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Comic Chat
David Kurlander, Tim Skelly, David H. Salesin.
SIGGRAPH 96, 1996. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Computer-Generated Pen-and-Ink Illustration
George Winkenbach.
University of Washington, 1996. [BibTeX]

PhD Thesis Illustrating Transparency: communicating the 3D shape of layered transparent surfaces via texture
Victoria Interrante.
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1996. [BibTeX]

Proceedings On the Silhouette Cartoon Animation
Tosiyasu L. Kunii, Takao Maeda.
Computer Animation, pp. 110--117, June, 1996. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Painterly Rendering for Animation
Barbara J. Meier.
Proceedings of SIGGRAPH '96, 1996. [BibTeX]

Article Pertinent Data for Modelling Pigmented Materials in Realistic Rendering
Patrick Le Callet.
Computer Graphics Forum, Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 119--127, 1996. [BibTeX]

Proceedings Rendering Line Drawings with Limited Resources

Author(s): Stefan Schlechtweg, Thomas Strothotte.
Proceedings: Proceedings of GraphiCon'96, Vol. 2, pp. 131--137, St. Petersburg, Russia, July, 1996.
[BibTeX] Find this paper on Google

Abstract:
Pictures play an important role in the communication process. Communicative goals can be expressed for instance with the specific use of different levels of abstraction in pictures. Especially in textbooks and scientific publications, images are used where the level of detail of different objects is deliberately changed to express the importance of an object in the picture. In this paper we introduce the concept of "drawing resources" for rendered line-drawings. This concept defines measures for controlling the level of detail of single objects in a drawing. We present a system which is based on a line-renderer and which enables a user to interact with the drawing thus created. The concept of drawing resources yields a new basis for formulating the user's ideas of the appearance of the final image.

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