3

I would like to do an interesting project for a computer graphics course. I know that there is a lot of literature out there (i.e. SIGGRAPH conference papers). I have a very large range of interest with regard to computer graphics (i.e. image processing, 3D modeling, rendering, animation). However, I've only taken computer vision/graphics for 2 semesters and thus don't have too much background experience, except for the class projects that I had to do.

I've been looking through SIGGRAPH papers trying to see if there is anything that will be of interest to me but the literature is extremely vast. I was wondering if anyone has any topic suggestions, anything interesting that you ran across that you could recommend. I would prefer to do something fun yet slightly challenging (not really interested in making a shooter game).

If this question does not belong here, I apologize and please let me know where I should move it.

Thanks!

2
  • From the way you talk about "not really interested in making a shooter game", it seems you are most specifically talking about graphics, not vision. Are you more interested in graphics? Or in vision? The two are very separate entities. Apr 15, 2010 at 18:49
  • really either one. By vision, I guess I meant more image processing techniques to do interesting things with images (one example could be the seamcarving algorithm to resize images). When I said "not really interested in making a shooter game" I just meant that there are so many of those that get done as projects that I didn't want a repeat. Also, the extent to which I'll be able to make it look good is probably not that great.
    – Myx
    Apr 15, 2010 at 19:04

2 Answers 2

2

Image Drawing animator. (the name is kind of misleading, but I didn't care much about it)

Anyway, the software does the following:

  1. Takes an image say a JPEG or BMP as input.
  2. Extract the lines from the image. (I used Matlab and Laplace transformations)
  3. Convert the static lines to Vector paths.
  4. Simulate drawing the image using the extracted paths.

In summary, you should give an image, for example a city scape, the program extract all lines and start drawing the buildings, streets and sunset lines, then finally add the colors one by one, until the full image is done.

2
  • I'm not sure it would look great, because automatically detected lines tend to differ from the usual notion of object borders (for example, consider shadows). But the area of non-photorealistic image based rendering is really cool (one could emulate different painting techniques), and the results are often impressive. For example see compression.ru/video/cartoonizer/index_en.html Apr 22, 2010 at 15:59
  • @overrider, actually my application was doing something exactly like "Adriana Sklenarikova" photo from your link, then after drawing the lines, it starts shading the colors one by one, it was an old project, unfortunately i don't have a clip during its work.
    – mohdajami
    Apr 22, 2010 at 17:14
1

Real time hand(s) detector.

You'll have plenty of interesting and fun applications with this.

2

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.