How2Sketch
Author(s) -
James W. Hennessey,
Han Liu,
Holger Winnemöller,
Mira Dontcheva,
Niloy J. Mitra
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
king abdullah university of science and technology repository (king abdullah university of science and technology)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3023368.3023371
Subject(s) - computer science , perspective (graphical) , object (grammar) , construct (python library) , task (project management) , selection (genetic algorithm) , scaffold , geometric primitive , artificial intelligence , computer vision , engineering drawing , theoretical computer science , algorithm , programming language , management , engineering , economics
Accurately drawing 3D objects is difficult for untrained individuals, as it requires an understanding of perspective and its effects on geometry and proportions. Step-by-step tutorials break the complex task of sketching an entire object down into easy-to-follow steps that even a novice can follow. However, creating such tutorials requires expert knowledge and is time-consuming. As a result, the availability of tutorials for a given object or viewpoint is limited. How2Sketch (H2S) addresses this problem by automatically generating easy-to-follow tutorials for arbitrary 3D objects. Given a segmented 3D model and a camera viewpoint, H2S computes a sequence of steps for constructing a drawing scaffold comprised of geometric primitives, which helps the user draw the final contours in correct perspective and proportion. To make the drawing scaffold easy to construct, the algorithm solves for an ordering among the scaffolding primitives and explicitly makes small geometric modifications to the size and location of the object parts to simplify relative positioning. Technically, we formulate this scaffold construction as a single selection problem that simultaneously solves for the ordering and geometric changes of the primitives. We generate different tutorials on man-made objects using our method and evaluate how easily the tutorials can be followed with a user study
Accelerating Research
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom
Address
John Eccles HouseRobert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom