by Stefan Hiller, Heino Hellwig, Oliver Deussen
Abstract:
Stippling is a efficient technique for representing surfaces in pen-and-ink. We present new methods for stipple drawings by computer. In contrast to already existing techniques arbitrary shapes can be used for the dots. An extension of Lloyd's method enables us to position small objects on the plane in a visually pleasing form. This allows us to generate new illustration styles, similar methods can also be used for positioning objects in other applications.
Reference:
Beyond Stippling - Methods for Distributing Objects on the Plane (Stefan Hiller, Heino Hellwig, Oliver Deussen), In EUROGRAPHICS 2003, 2003.
Bibtex Entry:
@ARTICLE{aufsatz50254,
AUTHOR = {Hiller, Stefan and Hellwig, Heino and Deussen, Oliver},
AFFILIATION = {CGV},
TITLE = {Beyond Stippling - Methods for Distributing Objects on the Plane},
BOOKTITLE = {Proceedings of Eurographics 2003},
JOURNAL = {EUROGRAPHICS 2003},
KEYWORDS = {Beyond Stippling - Methods for Distributing Objects on the Plane},
YEAR = {2003},
ABSTRACT = {Stippling is a efficient technique for representing surfaces in
pen-and-ink. We present new methods for stipple drawings by
computer. In contrast to already existing techniques arbitrary
shapes can be used for the dots. An extension of Lloyd's method
enables us to position small objects on the plane in a visually
pleasing form. This allows us to generate new illustration styles,
similar methods can also be used for positioning objects in other
applications.},
DOI = {10.1111/1467-8659.00699},
URL = {http://tu-dresden.de/die_tu_dresden/fakultaeten/fakultaet_informatik/smt/cgv/publikationen/2003/beyond_stippling_-_methods_for_distributing_objects_on_the_plane.pdf}
}