CVMay 8, 2019

TE141K: Artistic Text Benchmark for Text Effect Transfer

arXiv:1905.03646v323 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the labor-intensive creation of artistic text effects for designers and normal users, but it is incremental as it focuses on dataset creation and a baseline model.

The paper tackles the problem of automatic text effect transfer by introducing TE141K, a dataset with 141,081 text effect/glyph pairs, and proposes TET-GAN, which outperforms 14 benchmark models in qualitative and quantitative evaluations.

Text effects are combinations of visual elements such as outlines, colors and textures of text, which can dramatically improve its artistry. Although text effects are extensively utilized in the design industry, they are usually created by human experts due to their extreme complexity; this is laborious and not practical for normal users. In recent years, some efforts have been made toward automatic text effect transfer; however, the lack of data limits the capabilities of transfer models. To address this problem, we introduce a new text effects dataset, TE141K, with 141,081 text effect/glyph pairs in total. Our dataset consists of 152 professionally designed text effects rendered on glyphs, including English letters, Chinese characters, and Arabic numerals. To the best of our knowledge, this is the largest dataset for text effect transfer to date. Based on this dataset, we propose a baseline approach called text effect transfer GAN (TET-GAN), which supports the transfer of all 152 styles in one model and can efficiently extend to new styles. Finally, we conduct a comprehensive comparison in which 14 style transfer models are benchmarked. Experimental results demonstrate the superiority of TET-GAN both qualitatively and quantitatively and indicate that our dataset is effective and challenging.

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