posted on 2016-02-19, 08:43authored byJan Koenderink, Andrea van Doorn, Baingio Pinna, Johan Wagemans
Many pictures are approximately piecewise
uniform quilts. The patches meet in transitional areas that have a vague,
ribbon-like geometry. These borders may occasionally get lost and sometimes
pick up again, creating a ‘passage’ that partly blends adjacent patches. This
type of structure is widely discussed in treatises on painting technique.
Similar effects (lost outlines, passages) occur in drawing. The border regions
are characterized by width, or sharpness and amplitude – which is the contrast between
the patches on each side. Moreover, border regions have various textural
structures. We propose a formal theory of such transitions. Images can be
understood as superpositions of border areas. Stylistic changes can be
implemented through the selective treatment of borders. The theory is formally
similar to, though crucially different in meaning from, the theory of ‘edges’
(a technical term) in image processing. We propose it as a formal framework
that enables principled discussion of ‘edge qualities’ (a term used by painters
in a way unrelated to the use of ‘edge’ in image processing) in a
well-structured manner.