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CGF
2006

Cross Dissolve Without Cross Fade: Preserving Contrast, Color and Salience in Image Compositing

14 years 18 days ago
Cross Dissolve Without Cross Fade: Preserving Contrast, Color and Salience in Image Compositing
Linear interpolation is the standard image blending method used in image compositing. By averaging in the dynamic range, it reduces contrast and visibly degrades the quality of composite imagery. We demonstrate how to correct linear interpolation to resolve this longstanding problem. To provide visually meaningful, high level control over the compositing process, we introduce three novel image blending operators that are designed to preserve key visual characteristics of their inputs. Our contrast preserving method applies a linear color mapping to recover the contrast lost due to linear interpolation. Our salience preserving method retains the most informative regions of the input images by balancing their relative opacity with their relative saliency. Our color preserving method extends homomorphic image processing by establishing an isomorphism between the image colors and the real numbers, allowing any mathematical operation defined on real numbers to be applied to colors without ...
Mark Grundland, Rahul Vohra, Gareth P. Williams, N
Added 11 Dec 2010
Updated 11 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where CGF
Authors Mark Grundland, Rahul Vohra, Gareth P. Williams, Neil A. Dodgson
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