Charlie Chaplin in "By the Sea" (1915). Colorized by DeOldify.pic.twitter.com/lxMllduuxj
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Replying to @citnaj
Wow the Specular choice on the hats is fascinating. There's a lot to read into that object to arrive at that choice and it seems consistent across the similar objects (hats)
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Replying to @3pointedit
Yeah I'm definitely doubting the hats were purple for all three of them! Not sure what exactly is driving that.
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Replying to @citnaj
It seems to have settled on a choice of fabric based on its edge reaction to light, the clothes exhibit a similar trait. I wonder if semantic (future) decisions would include gender and age to approximate class and clothes choice?
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Replying to @3pointedit
Gender and age considerations aren't far fetched, especially since there's self attention in the model. It may already be happening, but I couldn't tell you for sure.
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Replying to @citnaj
Does it have a training set from source period fabrics? Contemporary materials would be very different I would think, of course period color images are nonexistent. Peter Jacksons "They Shall Not Grow Old" restoration had trouble with this (can't find ref) https://blog.pond5.com/22379-how-peter-jackson-used-archival-footage-to-bring-wwi-to-the-present/ …
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It doesn't. I've been ;thinking about this problem for a while. I think there's a solution and it doesn't involve needing color picture examples :)
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Replying to @citnaj
Wow, that's intriguing! Can't wait to see what you come up with then
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