Browsing by Author "Hertzmann, Aaron"
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Item Video Motion Stylization by 2D Rigidification(The Eurographics Association, 2019) Delanoy, Johanna; Bousseau, Adrien; Hertzmann, Aaron; Kaplan, Craig S. and Forbes, Angus and DiVerdi, StephenThis paper introduces a video stylization method that increases the apparent rigidity of motion. Existing stylization methods often retain the 3D motion of the original video, making the result look like a 3D scene covered in paint rather than a 2D painting of a scene. In contrast, traditional hand-drawn animations often exhibit simplified in-plane motion, such as in the case of cut-out animations where the animator moves pieces of paper from frame to frame. Inspired by this technique, we propose to modify a video such that its content undergoes 2D rigid transforms. To achieve this goal, our approach applies motion segmentation and optimization to best approximate the input optical flow with piecewise-rigid transforms, and re-renders the video such that its content follows the simplified motion. The output of our method is a new video and its optical flow, which can be fed to any existing video stylization algorithm.Item ZoomShop: Depth-Aware Editing of Photographic Composition(The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2022) Liu, Sean J.; Agrawala, Maneesh; DiVerdi, Stephen; Hertzmann, Aaron; Chaine, Raphaƫlle; Kim, Min H.We present ZoomShop, a photographic composition editing tool for adjusting relative size, position, and foreshortening of scene elements. Given an image and corresponding depth map as input, ZoomShop combines a novel non-linear camera model and a depth-aware image warp to reproject and deform the image. Users can isolate objects by selecting depth ranges and adjust their scale and foreshortening, which controls the paths of the camera rays through the scene. Users can also select 2D image regions and translate them, which determines the objective function in the image warp optimization. We demonstrate that ZoomShop can be used to achieve useful compositional goals, such as making a distant object more prominent while preserving foreground scenery, or making objects both larger and closer together so they still fit in the frame.