CS 194-26 - Face Morphing
Defining Correspondences & Computing the “Mid-way Face”
The first part of the project, we had to morph from one face to another face. For my faces, I decided to use a portrait of Obama nad an old man since I felt that the two faces were comporable and easy to put points on both faces to create a seemless morph.
Obama and Old man
Old Obama
The Morph Sequence
Obama and Old man
Old Obama
The “Mean face” of a population
For the next part of project, we had to merge two faces to create a modified face that combined aspects of both faces. For this part, I used Putin and the Danish data set since I felt that these two sets were once again comporable in order to create an image with the two faces merged together.
Meshed version of Putin and the average Danish
Putin morphed with Danish average
Danish average morphed with Putin
Regular Putin vs Putin as a caricature
vs.
CS 194-26 - Face Morphing
Defining Correspondences & Computing the “Mid-way Face”
The first part of the project, we had to morph from one face to another face. For my faces, I decided to use a portrait of Obama nad an old man since I felt that the two faces were comporable and easy to put points on both faces to create a seemless morph.
The Morph Sequence
The “Mean face” of a population
For the next part of project, we had to merge two faces to create a modified face that combined aspects of both faces. For this part, I used Putin and the Danish data set since I felt that these two sets were once again comporable in order to create an image with the two faces merged together.
Caricatures: Extrapolating from the me