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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a method of creating a new hairstyle on a subject
and more particularly to such a method and apparatus utilizing a digital
computer and television camera in combination in which the video image of
the subject is transferred to the computer, the present hairstyle is
electronically removed from the computer image and a new hairstyle is
placed on the remaining image.
For many years people have wondered what they would look like in a
different hairstyle. The only way to find out the answer to that question
has been to go to a beautician or barber and have your hairstyle changed.
In many instances, it is impossible to return to the original style if the
person does not like the new style. For example, a woman with long hair
who wonders what she would look like with short hair would be unable to
return to a long hairstyle once the hair is cut.
Even when a customer underwent a new style change, that person would still
wonder what they would have looked like with a different style. In
addition, when the customer receives the new hairstyle, their spouse,
friends or other loved ones may not be entirely satisfied with the new
look. Further, the spouse and others may have desired a different
hairstyle rather than the hairstyle selected by the customer.
Whenever the customer walks into a barber shop or a beauty shop, the
professional barber or beautician may know of new or current styles which
would be very attractive on the customer. However it is difficult for the
professional hairstylist to convince a customer to undergo a change unless
a customer can actually see himself or herself with the new hairstyle.
Merely showing the customer a picture of a professional model with the
latest hairstyle may create some interest in the customer for undergoing a
hairstyle change, but it still may be difficult and time consuming for the
hairstylist to convince the customer to undergo the hairstyle change. The
reason, or course, is that the customer is very cautious in undergoing a
hair style change since he or she cannot actually visualize himself or
herself with the new hairstyle.
The advent of modern electronics has provided the small retail barber shop
or beauty shop with the economic ability to afford a personal computer.
Recent innovations have permitted television pictures to be converted for
viewing on a video display and to be modified, or operated upon, in a
certain desired manner. For example, the Macintosh computer, a trademark
of Macintosh Laboratory, Inc. and which is licensed to Apple Computer,
Inc. of Cupertino, Calif., when attached to a MacVision digitizer unit, a
trademark of and manufactured by Koala Technologies Corporation of Santa
Clara, Calif., produces signals representative of an image taken by a
television camera which can be viewed on a video display and thereafter
operated upon.
It is therefore desirable to provide a method which uses a computer system
to enable a person to see himself or herself with one or more new
hairstyles.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with one aspect of this invention, a method of displaying on
a video screen an image of a subject with a new hairstyle includes
producing first video data representative of a plurality of available
hairstyles; producing second video data representative of the face and
present hairstyle of the subject; displaying on the screen an image of the
face and present hairstyle based on the second video data; providing a
predetermined border on the screen; proportioning the image of the face to
fit within the predetermined border; displaying on the screen based on the
first video data an image of the new hairstyle selected from the plurality
of available hairstyles; and placing the images of the face and the new
hairstyle together on the screen. Preferably, the proportioning of the
image of the new hairstyle is completed prior to displaying the images of
the face and present hairstyle of the subject on the screen. The method
also includes separating the image of the present hairstyle from the face
and then removing the present hairstyle from the screen.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a method which
previews the appearance of a subject with a new hairstyle.
It is another object of the invention to provide a method which employs a
computer system and video camera to preview an image of a subject with a
desired new hairstyle.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide a method and apparatus
which provides a permanent copy of the previewed subject with the desired
new hairstyle.
Still other objects and advantages of the invention will in part be obvious
and will in part be apparent from the specification.
The invention accordingly comprises several steps and the relation of one
or more of such steps with respect to each of the others, which will be
exemplified in the method hereinafter disclosed, and the scope of the
invention will be indicateed in the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
For a further understanding of the invention, reference is made to the
following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings,
in which:
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of the apparatus used in the subject invention;
FIG. 2 shows a general flow diagram of the procedures used in the method of
the subject invention;
FIG. 3 shows the overlay used to proportion the images;
FIG. 4 shows the proportioned image of the subject on the computer display;
and
FIG. 5 shows the face of the subject being inserted into a new hairstyle,
and
FIG. 6 shows a partial flow diagram in which certain steps of FIG. 2 have
been changed in accordance with an alternative embodiment of the invention
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1, a block diagram of the hardware use in the
invention is shown. A subject 10 is seated in a chair 12 and illuminated
by appropriate lights 14. An image of subject 10 is obtained by television
camera 16, which is positioned in a stationary manner on a camera stand
18. Camera 16 includes a zoom lens control 20 for increasing or decreasing
the size of the picture obtained. Initially, zoom lens control 20 should
be set to obtain the entire face and hair of subject 10.
Camera 16 receives its power from a power converter 22 which has a plug 24
adapted to being plugged into conventional household current.
Alternatively, camera 16 may be powered by conventional batteries used to
power portable cameras. An electric signal manifesting the conventional
video image is provided from camera 16 to an analog to digital converter
26 through power converter 22 and video to digital converter 26 may be
packaged in a single unit such as the MacVision device, manufactured by
Koala Technologies Corporation of Santa Clara, Calif.
A computer system 28 is attached to converter 26 to both receive the
converted digital signal therefrom and to control converter 26 regarding
the manner in which the signal is transmitted to computer system 28.
Computer system 28 may include a central processing unit (CPU) 30, an
internal graphics display 32 and an internal disk drive 34. An example of
such a computer system 28 is the Macintosh computer, manufactured and sold
by Apple Computer, Inc. of Cupertino, Calif.
Attached to computer system 28 is a second external disk drive 36 which may
be used for storing data used in the method of the subject invention. This
is contrasted with the internal disk 34 which may be used to store the
operating programs used to control the method of the subject invention. In
addition, a graphic printer 38 is attached to computer system 28 and one
or more appropriate data input devices 40 are attached to system 28. The
data input devices 40 may include a keyboard and a device known as a
mouse. As is well known, a mouse is a device which can be rolled on a flat
surface to cause a corresponding movement of the cursor of computer system
28, as viewed on display 32.
In controlling computer system 28 and its associated apparatus, two
principal programs are required. The first program is the MacPaint,
computer program, a trademark of and manufactured and sold by Apple
Computer, Inc., which is included in the MacVision digitizer unit, the
second program is copied onto the MacPaint program so that the user may
install a single operating program diskette in internal disk drive 34 to
control all aspects of the subject method. A data diskette containing
digital data which manifests a plurality of selectable hairstyles is
stored on a disk which can be inserted into external disk 36. The computer
system 28 can then read the data for a selected hairstyle from external
disk 36 and allow it to be manipulated in a manner to be described
hereafter. Also described hereafter is the manner in which the data is
placed on the data diskette.
Referring now to FIG. 2, a flow diagram of the method of the subject
invention is shown. Before describing the method in detail, however, a
general description of what happens during the operation of the method
will be given. The purpose of the invention, of course, is to show a
customer, such as subject 10, what that customer would look like with a
different hairstyle. To accomplish this, a video image of the face of
subject 10 is caused to be displayed on display 32. This image is adjusted
in size by using an overlay device, such as shown in FIG. 3, and by
controlling zoom lens control 20. The data stored on the data diskette in
external disk 36 will also have been proportioned to the same size.
Thereafter, by using certain functions of the MacPaint program, the hair
can be removed leaving only the outline of the face from subject 10
appearing on display 32. Then, the selected new hairstyle is retrieved
from the data diskette in external disk 36 and the cutaway face and new
hairstyle are pasted together. Any additional operations which must be
performed are then done, such as filling in blank areas or eliminating
unwanted lines and the resultant image is printed on printer 38.
The detailed operation of computer system 28 will hereafter be described
with respect to blocks 42 through 56 (even numbers only) shown in FIG. 2.
First, according to block 42, the initial set up procedure occurs. By this
it is meant that subject 10 must be properly positioned with respect to
camera 20 and lights 14 turned on and adjusted. The operating program is
inserted into the internal disk 34 of computer 28 and the data disk is
inserted into external disk 36.
Next, according to block 44, after subject 10 is properly positioned with
respect to camera 16, the MacVision program is selected from the menu of
programs on the operating program diskette to cause the picture
acquisition to occur. This results in a video image of subject 10 being
scanned across display 32. During the scanning of the image of subject 10
on display 32, the image quality is adjusted by adjusting knobs on
converter 26. These knobs are used to adjust both the contrast of the
picture as well as the brightness of the picture.
Next, according to block 46 and after the camera and subject are properly
positioned together with the appropriate lighting and the proper contrast
and brightness are set, a useable picture must be obtained for subsequent
use in changing the hairstyle. This requires a proportioned image to be
obtained of the subject's head using the overlay 58 shown in FIG. 3 and
adjusting the zoom control 20.
Referring now to FIG. 3, the overlay 58 referred with respect to block 46
is shown. Overlay 58 includes a backing sheet 60 and a rotating sheet 62.
Both backing sheet 60 and rotating sheet 62 should be made of a clear
plastic material, such as acetate, and be capable of having printed
thereon certain data to be described hereafter. The data on rotating sheet
62 includes a left frame line 64, top frame line 66, right frame ling 68,
and bottom frame line 70 which define the proper proportioning of the face
of the image of subject 10. Rotating sheet 62 is designed to rotate about
a pivot 72 with respect to backing sheet 60 and an arrow 74 extending
upward from the center of top frame line 66 is also printed on rotating
sheet 62. Printed on backing sheet 60 is a plurality of angular
designations from 60 degrees to 90 degrees to the left and right of a
perpendicular at 90 degrees. The arrow 74 is positioned at the 90 degree
designation when the lines 64 and 68 are vertical with respect to the
sides of backing sheet 60.
Prior to having begun the procedure, subject 10 would have looked through a
catalog of pictures of various hairstyles and selected the picture having
the hairstyle subject 10 believed desired. Data manifesting this picture
would have previously been stored in an addressable location on the data
diskette inserted into external disk 36. It should be noted however that
in many of the photographs in the catalog from which subject 10 selects
one or more new hairstyles, the head of each model with a new the
hairstyle may be at a slight angle on the photograph. This angular
position of the head of the model would cause the data manifesting the new
hairstyle on the model stored on the diskette in external disk 36 to also
be at an angle. Thus, one would desire that the head of subject 10
correspondingly be positioned at the same angle so that when the new
hairstyle is removed from the disk in external diskette 36 and placed on
the face of subject 10 appearing on display 32, there is no angular
mismatch between the new hairstyle and the face.
In order to avoid the above noted angular displacement problem overlay 58
is placed on the picture selected by subject 10 and rotating sheet 62 is
rotated to a position equal to a vertical line through the center of the
head of the model having the new hairstyle. Thereafter, overlay 58 is
placed directly against the screen of display 32. Two things are then
required before the final image of subject 10 is obtained. First, zoom
lens 20 must be adjusted in order to have the entire face of subject 10
positioned between the lines 64, 66, 68 and 70. This is shown in FIG. 4
with the lines 64, 66, 68 and 70 shown as dashed lines. In addition, if it
had been necessary to rotate rotating sheet 62 with respect to backing
sheet 60, the head of the subject 10 is tilted as necessary to ensure that
the head is aligned with the now rotated lines 64, 66, 68 and 70. In FIG.
4 it is assumed that arrow 74 is pointing towards 90 degrees and that no
rotation of subject's head is required. It should be noted that in
controlling zoom lens control 20 on camera 16 only the face of subject 10
should be positioned between the lines 64, 66, 68 and 70. It is not
desired that the entire picture, including the hair of subject 10, be
positioned between the lines.
Referring again to FIG. 2, once the image has been properly proportioned
and the subject's head adjusted at the appropriate angle, the resultant
image is then frozen. In using the MacVision program this may be
accomplished by merely clicking the mouse button on the mouse portion of
data input devices 40. Once the image is frozen, subject 10 may relax and
the power to camera 16 and light 14 may be disconnected.
Next, according to block 48, the frozen image is stored in the memory of
the computer system 28. Then the MacVision program, used to obtain the
image, is exited and the MacPaint program is entered and the image is
displayed again with respect to the MacPaint program. Such a display would
be similar to that shown in FIG. 4 with the lines 64, 66, 68 and 70
removed. As is well known, the MacPaint program includes a plurality of
icons which can be used to easily manipulate the picture shown in the
picture frame 78 of display screen 76. The icons include the commands 82,
the tools 84, the line widths 86 and the patterns 88. Of importance for
the subject method are the tools called a lasso 90, a hand 92, a paint
brush 94, an eraser 93, a spray paint 95 and a pencil 96. The mouse
portion of data input device 40 can be moved to cause a cursor 98 to be
moved over one of the commands 82, tools 84, line widths 86 or patterns 88
in order to select the appropriate icon desired. For example, if the hand
icon 92 is selected, cursor 98 takes the shape of a hand. Then by touching
an image 100 appearing on picture frame 78, the image 100 can be moved up,
down, right or left as indicated by movement of the mouse. Further, if it
were desired to do an editing function, the mouse would move cursor 98
over the word edit in commands 82 and the button on the mouse would be
released. This would cause a menu of edit functions to appear and the
mouse again would move the cursor to illuminate a select one of the edit
functions. For further information on utilizing the Macintosh computer,
reference is made to the documents provided therewith by Apple Computer,
Inc.
Referring now to block 50 in FIG. 2, the next step is to outline the face
of image 100 and to store that face. This may occur by selecting the lasso
icon 90 and moving the mouse so that the lasso traces an entire face 102
including the hairline of image 100. This trace is shown by a dark line
104 in FIG. 4. After the entire face 102 is outlined by the lasso icon 92,
as indicated by line 104 to begin blinking as manifested in FIG. 4 by the
slanted lines within line 104. After, arrow camor is clicked in a box 101
located in the upper left hand corner of frame 78, the screen goes blank
and the file command is selected. Within that command, the open function
is selected to cause the blinking image within lines 104 to be stored in
the memory of computer system 28. While in the file menu, the drive
function is then selected to enable data to be obtained from external
drive 36. When this occurs, a menu appears with the various hairstyles
stored on the diskette within external drive 36 and the desired hairstyle
is selected using the mouse. This is indicated by block 52 in FIG. 4 and
the result is that the hairstyle 106 is then displayed on the picture
frame 78 portion of display as shown in FIG. 5.
Referring now to block 54, in FIG. 2, the face 102 previously stored at
block 50 is retrieved and, as shown in FIG. 5, is moved towards a
displayed new hairstyle 106 and into a blank face position 108 thereof.
This may be accomplished by utilizing the hand icon 92 to move the face
102 with respect to the displayed new hairstyle 106. Once the face 102 is
positioned properly with respect to the new selected style 106, then
according to block 56 of FIG. 2 further adjustments, as necessary, are
made and the resultant image is printed on printer 38.
Alternatively, as shown in FIG. 6, steps 52 and 54 are replaced by steps
52' and 54'. Under step 52', face 102 is retrieved from memory and shown
on display 32 without the present hairstyle or a new hairstyle 106 also
being displayed. Thereafter, under step 54' new hairstyle 106 is displayed
with face 102 as shown in FIG. 5. New hairstyle 106 and face 102 are then
moved towards each other as described above.
Many adjustments can be made once face 102 is properly positioned with
respect to selected style 106. For example, the face cut away from image
100 shown in FIG. 4 of subject 10 may not exactly fit in the blank face
position 108 of the style 106. Thus, it may be necessary to remove or fill
in certain areas around the face 102 with respect to the selected style
106. If the sides of the hairstyle and face of the customer do not match,
the lasso icon 90 can be used to move the hairstyle and bring the two into
alignment. Further, the hairstyle on selected style 106 may be too high or
too wide for the particular person having face 102 and by using the lasso
90 icon, a certain portion of the hair may be cut away and moved downward
to give it a smaller look. Some smoothing may be accomplished by using the
paintbrush icon 94 or pencil icon 96. Also, if the image on display 76
requires additional hair, such as additional length or hair behind the
ears, the spray paint icon 95 can be used. If hair is to be removed, the
eraser icon 93 may be used. In addition, the bangs can be adjusted or
rotated using a Click-Art Effect computer program sold by T/Maker Graphics
of Mountainview, Calif.
In addition, the adjustments may include a series of special substyles
stored in the scrap book menu in the MacPaint program. For example, a
series of bangs, mustaches and beards may be stored and the operator of
computer system 28 may desire to place a different type of bang or
mustache or beard on the image being formed. The computer program may
include a help menu in the notepad and included as a part of the MacPaint
program.
After the necessary adjustments are made to the final image, the print
function is selected from file command and the image on picture frame 78
is printed by a graphic printer 38. At that point the subject 10 can be
handed a printed copy of the new hairstyle on the subject's face.
The data stored on the data disk may be obtained in substantially the same
way as outlined above. However, instead of taking a video picture of a
subject 10, the video picture would be of the photograph showing the
style. The zoom control 20 would be adjusted so that the image of the
photograph would fit within the lines 64, 66, 68 and 70 of overlay 58. In
so doing, the rotating sheet 62 of overlay 58 can be adjusted so that the
vertical lines 64 and 68 are aligned with the general direction of the
photograph.
Once the photograph is properly positioned and aligned on display 32, the
face of the model is removed using the lasso icon 90 resulting in the
hairline of the model bordering lines 64, 66, 68 and 70 of overlay 58.
Thereafter, the remaining hair is stored on the external disk 36 diskette
in an addressable position thereof. The definition of that position should
be marked on the photograph so that the style can be retrieved simply.
If after printing of a particular image of subject 10 with a new hairstyle,
it is desired that a second style be placed on subject's head, the same
procedure can be repeated. Where the angular adjustment for both styles is
the same, it may not be necessary to obtain the facial image of subject 10
once again.
As now can be readily appreciated, the invention provides a method and
apparatus for quickly and simply previewing one or a plurality of new
hairstyles on a subject. Permanent copies of the subject's appearance with
the new hairstyle are also readily available through this invention.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, and those made
apparent from the preceding description, are efficiently obtained and,
since certain changes may be made in the above construction without
departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, it is intended that
all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying
drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover
all the generic and specific features of the invention herein described,
and all statements of the scope of the invention, which, as a matter of
language might be said to fall therebetween.
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Description  |
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