The invention relates in general to lenticular images, and in particular to lenticular images which display images of an individual which gives the appearance of an individual aging or regressing as the lenticular image is moved.
Lenticular image, as used herein, describes the class of images that are formed on the back side of a lenticular support or substrate and which provide the ability to selectively view at a certain viewing angle a single image from a set of images. The lenticular substrate is a parallel array of cylindrical lenses, or lenticules, made of a suitable clear material which forms the substrate onto which specially formatted image data is applied. This specially formatted image data as described in the art, consists of separate, parallel image lines or image views placed behind and along the length of each lenticule. These image view lines are alternatively called lineform or integral image data. There are usually many distinct image view lines arranged in parallel behind each lenticule. As the number of view lines behind each lenticule increases, the spacing between each line must decrease proportionally for a given lenticule size. It is not unusual to have image view line spacing on the order of 12 to 15 microns or less depending on the imaging technology used to generate the images.
The thickness of the lenticular substrate is designed so that when the image data is applied to the back surface of the substrate, the image view lines will be located at the back focal distance of each of the individual lenticules. This allows each image view behind a given lenticule to be seen through the lenticule separately from the other image views as the lenticule is observed at different view angles. This is because the cone of light that emanates off a view line, either from transmittance or reflection, to the lenticule lens surface refracts and forms a mostly parallel ray of light exiting the lenslet at an angle determined by the placement of the view line relative to the lenticule. The width of the parallel rays emerging from the lenticule will have the same width as that of the lenticule and thus the view line's width will be seen magnified to that of the lenticule.
The resolution of a lenticular image, in the direction perpendicular to the lenticules, will always be equal to the pitch of the lenticular array. The actual number of different images that can be seen as the viewing angle changes will be the number of image lines placed behind each lenticule. Of course there will always be a practical limit on exactly how many distinct views can actually be resolved. This limit will be determined by such things as the optical quality of the lenses of the lenticular substrate, the resolution of the media used to form the image lines and the manufacturing tolerance for the thickness of lenticular substrate.
Viewing of individual images is accomplished by the cylindrical lenses and the fact that they restrict the view each eyes sees. The changing of views that are visible to each eye is accomplished by changing the viewing angle of the eyes relative to the centerline of the lenticules. This means that either the lenticular media must be rotated or the location of the viewers eye must be physically moved to see the different image views of the lenticular image. Therefore, small lenticular cards are usually held in the hand and rotated, while large lenticular images are usually backlit and firmly mounted with the lenticules in the vertical direction, requiring the viewer to walk past the lenticular image.
Depending on the content of the original source images and how these source images are formatted and applied to the lenticular array substrate, different lenticular image effects can be produced. If the original image source data contains multiple parallax images of a scene, the data can be formatted onto the lenticular substrate in such a way as to produce an autostereoscopic image. In this instance the lenticules are oriented vertically as a person views the stereo image. Since each eye views the lenticules from different angles, each eye sees different views behind the lenticules and the image appears to have the quality of depth.
Another common use for lenticular imaging is to view motion or dynamic image content. In this case a temporal image sequence, which might be from a video clip, is sampled, formatted and applied to the lenticular substrate. When used in this application the lenticules are oriented horizontally and in this case each eye will see exactly the same view. The lenticular image can then be rotated by hand along the horizontal axis of the image so that the eyes see sequences of image views producing the effect of motion or scene change.
Another variation is to place several different image scenes in sequence together on one lenticular card forming a collage. The images may be thematically related but the individual images themselves are usually different pictures. Thus the images may be scenes relating to a family vacation or perhaps a wedding. The number of individual pictures displayed on this type lenticular card is usually limited to two to four. This is due to the fact that as more pictures are added to the lenticular card each individual picture will be seen over a smaller total viewing angle. This makes it difficult for the person viewing the card to see only one image at a time.
It is desirable to have a lenticular image made up of photographs of an individual taken at different periods in an individuals life and that give the appearance of the individual aging as the image is rotated.
According to one aspect of the present invention a chronological age altering lenticular image is comprised of a first photograph of an individual at a first age. A second photograph of the individual at a second age and a third photograph of the individual at a third age are included in the composite which comprises the lenticular image. The first, second, and third photographs show the individual at progressively older stages in the individuals life. In another embodiment the first, second, and third photographs show the individual at progressively younger stages in that individual's life. As the lenticular image is rotated the individual appears to age. If the lenticular image is rotated in the other direction the individual appears to grow younger.
According to another embodiment of the present invention a lenticular image is comprised of photographs of an individual taken at different times in the individual's life. For example, a child may have a photograph taken at school in the first grade, second grade, and third grade. These photographs are compiled into a lenticular image showing the student's face as he or she matures. Alternatively, if viewed starting from the most current photograph, the student's lenticular image would regress to the youngest age in the collection of photographs. Although three photographs are used in this example, many more photographs may be used, for example, photographs of the individual taken at grade one through grade twelve.
An alternate embodiment of the age regression lenticular photograph includes morphing each year's photographic image to standardize the size of the face in each photograph. Another embodiment automatically centers the face on each photograph based on a position of the subject's eyes, so that the face does not appear to move as the lenticular image is rotated. Yet another embodiment standardizes a background color in each photograph for a greater sense of continuity, and to focus attention on the subject's face rather than the background. A further embodiment of the invention uses computer generated age morphing of a single photograph to produce multiple images of an individual which are used for a composite lenticular image. Yet another embodiment employs computer generated age morphing to provide additional photographs for a composite lenticular image between two widely disparate photos taken many years apart of an individual.
The invention and its objects and advantages will become more apparent in the detailed description of the preferred embodiment presented below.
The present invention will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or in cooperation more directly with the apparatus in accordance with the present invention. It is to be understood that elements not specifically shown or described may take various forms well known to those skilled in the art.
The image bearing layer must be accurately registered with the lenticular array both in parallelism and position in order for the lenticular image to appear correctly. Depending on the type of image bearing layer 12, there may also be a diffusive reflective layer 19 laminated to the image bearing layer. This diffusive reflective layer 19 is provided to reflect light directed from the lenticule side back out so the images can be viewed from the front. Alternately, some lenticular image cards are viewed in a transmissive mode, where the diffusive reflective layer 19 does not reflect but transmits and diffuses light from a source coming from behind.
The sampling process is usually done using digital scanning and image processing techniques to produce the lineform images. Once the three images have been sampled they then are formed into one composite image file and printed onto the image bearing layer 12. This is done by interlacing the individual lines from each image. Since there are three source images there will be three image view lines behind each lenticule. The image data is then formatted so that the first line of each image is placed behind the first lenticule. As shown in
The second line of each image is then interlaced so that they fall behind the second lenticule. This is continued until all image lines from each source image have been interlaced.
As shown in
This is illustrated clearly in
In operation, as the lenticular image is rotated from the first position shown in
If only three images were available to form the chronological age altering lenticular image, morphing software could be used to generate additional images which would form part of the composite interleaved lenticular image to smooth the transition from one age to the other age for the individual. This could be done even if only two photographs were available, for example, if FIG. 5 and
Referring now to
Another problem that may be encountered is the background features of the different photographs may be distracting in photographs taken by a number of different people using different equipment at different days and at different times. Thus, for example, the background in the first photograph 74 may be red. In the off-centered photograph 67 the background 76 may be blue. Commercially available software is used to change the background color of one of the photographs, in this case the off-centered photograph 67, to use the same background color as the first photograph 62. Some of the photographs may also have undesirable background features which would detract from the chronological age altering lenticular image if left in the photograph. Thus, by way of example, a tree 78 in off-centered photograph 67 would also be removed to produce the second photograph in the composite image 66. This operation is preferably done by using image altering software which is commercially available but could be done manually, as could the other operations discussed above.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the scope of the invention. For example, although photographs showing the face of individuals have been used the invention described herein could be used to show other features of individuals such as full body photographs. The technique is also extendable to inanimate objects.
Reference is made to commonly-assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/930,691, filed Aug. 15, 2001 issued U.S. Pat. No. 6,574,047, entitled A BACKLIT DISPLAY FOR SELECTIVE ILLUMINATION LENTICULAR IMAGES, by Jeffery R. Hawver, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4276570 | Burson et al. | Jun 1981 | A |
5850463 | Horii | Dec 1998 | A |
6329987 | Gottfried et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030103061 A1 | Jun 2003 | US |