| 1 |
.\" RCSid "$Id: pdfblur.1,v 1.7 2008/11/10 19:08:17 greg Exp $" |
| 2 |
.TH PDFBLUR 1 1/24/96 RADIANCE |
| 3 |
.SH NAME |
| 4 |
pdfblur - generate views for depth-of-field blurring |
| 5 |
.SH SYNOPSIS |
| 6 |
.B pdfblur |
| 7 |
.B aperture |
| 8 |
.B nsamp |
| 9 |
.B viewfile |
| 10 |
.SH DESCRIPTION |
| 11 |
.I Pdfblur |
| 12 |
takes the given |
| 13 |
.I viewfile |
| 14 |
and computes |
| 15 |
.I nsamp |
| 16 |
views based on an aperture diameter of |
| 17 |
.I aperture |
| 18 |
(in world coordinate units) and a focal distance equal to the length of the |
| 19 |
.I \-vd |
| 20 |
view direction vector. |
| 21 |
When rendered and averaged together, these views will result in |
| 22 |
a picture with the specified depth of field. |
| 23 |
Either |
| 24 |
.I pinterp(1) |
| 25 |
or |
| 26 |
.I rpict(1) |
| 27 |
may be called to do the actual work. |
| 28 |
(The given |
| 29 |
.I viewfile |
| 30 |
must also be passed on the command line to the chosen renderer, since |
| 31 |
.I pdfblur |
| 32 |
provides supplemental view specifications only.)\0 |
| 33 |
.PP |
| 34 |
For |
| 35 |
.I pinterp, |
| 36 |
feed the output of |
| 37 |
.I pdfblur |
| 38 |
to the standard input of |
| 39 |
.I pinterp |
| 40 |
and apply the |
| 41 |
.I \-B |
| 42 |
option to blur views together. |
| 43 |
In most cases, a single picture with z-buffer is all that is required |
| 44 |
to get a satisfactory result, though the perfectionist may wish to |
| 45 |
apply three pictures arranged in a triangle about the aperature, or |
| 46 |
alternatively apply the |
| 47 |
.I \-ff |
| 48 |
option together with the |
| 49 |
.I \-fr |
| 50 |
option of |
| 51 |
.I pinterp. |
| 52 |
(The latter may actually work out to be faster, since rendering |
| 53 |
three views takes three times as long as a single view, and the |
| 54 |
.I \-fr |
| 55 |
option will end up recomputing relatively few pixels by |
| 56 |
comparison.)\0 |
| 57 |
.PP |
| 58 |
To use |
| 59 |
.I pdfblur |
| 60 |
with |
| 61 |
.I rpict, |
| 62 |
apply the |
| 63 |
.I \-S |
| 64 |
option to indicate a rendering sequence, and set the |
| 65 |
.I \-o |
| 66 |
option with a formatted file name to save multiple output |
| 67 |
pictures. |
| 68 |
When all the renderings are finished, combine them with the |
| 69 |
.I pcomb(1) |
| 70 |
program, using appropriate scalefactors to achieve an average. |
| 71 |
Note that using |
| 72 |
.I rpict |
| 73 |
is MUCH more expensive than using |
| 74 |
.I pinterp, |
| 75 |
and it is only recommended if the scene and application |
| 76 |
absolutely demand it (e.g. there is prominent refraction that |
| 77 |
must be modeled accurately). |
| 78 |
.PP |
| 79 |
For both |
| 80 |
.I pinterp |
| 81 |
and |
| 82 |
.I rpict, |
| 83 |
the computation time will be proportional to the number of views from |
| 84 |
.I pdfblur. |
| 85 |
We have found a |
| 86 |
.I nsamp |
| 87 |
setting somewhere between 5 and 10 to be adequate for most images. |
| 88 |
Relatively larger values are appropriate for larger aperatures. |
| 89 |
.PP |
| 90 |
The |
| 91 |
.I \-pd |
| 92 |
option of |
| 93 |
.I rpict |
| 94 |
may be used instead or in combination with or instead of |
| 95 |
.I pdfblur |
| 96 |
to blur depth-of-field. |
| 97 |
If used in combination, |
| 98 |
it is best to set the |
| 99 |
.I \-pd |
| 100 |
option to the overall |
| 101 |
.I aperture |
| 102 |
divided by |
| 103 |
.I nsamp |
| 104 |
to minimize ghosting in the output. |
| 105 |
.PP |
| 106 |
To simulate a particular camera's aperture, divide the focal length of |
| 107 |
the lens by the f-number, then convert to the corresponding |
| 108 |
world coordinate units. |
| 109 |
For example, if you wish to simulate a 50mm lens at f/2.0 in |
| 110 |
a scene modeled in meters, then you divide 50mm by 2.0 to get 25mm, |
| 111 |
which corresponds to an effective aperture of 0.025 meters. |
| 112 |
.SH EXAMPLES |
| 113 |
To use |
| 114 |
.I pinterp |
| 115 |
to simulate an aperture of 0.5 inches on a lens focused at a |
| 116 |
distance of 57 inches: |
| 117 |
.IP "" .2i |
| 118 |
rpict \-vf myview \-x 640 \-y 480 \-z orig.zbf scene.oct > orig.hdr |
| 119 |
.br |
| 120 |
pdfblur 0.5 57 8 orig.hdr | pinterp \-B \-vf orig.hdr \-x 640 \-y 480 |
| 121 |
orig.hdr orig.zbf > blurry.hdr |
| 122 |
.PP |
| 123 |
To use |
| 124 |
.I rpict |
| 125 |
exclusively to do the same: |
| 126 |
.IP "" .2i |
| 127 |
pdfblur .5 57 5 myview | rpict \-S 1 \-vf myview \-x 640 \-y 480 |
| 128 |
\-o view%d.hdr scene.oct |
| 129 |
.br |
| 130 |
pcomb \-s .2 view1.hdr \-s .2 view2.hdr \-s .2 view3.hdr \-s .2 |
| 131 |
view4.hdr \-s .2 view5.hdr > blurry.hdr |
| 132 |
.SH AUTHOR |
| 133 |
Greg Ward |
| 134 |
.SH BUGS |
| 135 |
This program really only works with perspective views. |
| 136 |
.SH "SEE ALSO" |
| 137 |
pcomb(1), pinterp(1), pmblur(1), pmblur2(1), |
| 138 |
pmdblur(1), rcalc(1), rpict(1), vwright(1) |