Lpics: a Hybrid Hardware-Accelerated Relighting Engine for Computer Cinematography

Fabio Pellacini, Kiril Vidimce, Aaron Lefohn, Alex Mohr, Mark Leone, John Warren

Abstract:

In computer cinematography, the process of lighting design involves placing and configuring lights to define the visual appearance of environments and to enhance story elements. This process is labor intensive and time consuming, primarily because lighting artists receive poor feedback from existing tools: interactive previews have very poor quality, while final-quality images often take hours to render.

This paper presents an interactive cinematic lighting system used in the production of computer-animated feature films containing environments of very high complexity, in which surface and light appearances are described using procedural RenderMan shaders. Our system provides lighting artists with high-quality previews at interactive framerates with only small approximations compared to the final rendered images. This is accomplished by combining numerical estimation of surface response, image-space caching, deferred shading, and the computational power of modern graphics hardware.

Our system has been successfully used in the production of two feature-length animated films, dramatically accelerating lighting tasks. In our experience interactivity fundamentally changes an artist's workflow, improving both productivity and artistic expressiveness.

Paper (PDF)

Additional materials: [lpics_siggraph.mp4]

Available in the Proceedings of SIGGRAPH 2005