Few-shot Font Generation by Learning Style Difference and Similarity
This addresses font library creation and personalized signatures, offering a domain-specific improvement over prior work.
The paper tackles the problem of few-shot font generation, where existing methods produce artifacts due to ignoring style differences and similarities, and proposes DS-Font, which uses contrastive learning and a multi-task discriminator to achieve significantly better results than state-of-the-art methods.
Few-shot font generation (FFG) aims to preserve the underlying global structure of the original character while generating target fonts by referring to a few samples. It has been applied to font library creation, a personalized signature, and other scenarios. Existing FFG methods explicitly disentangle content and style of reference glyphs universally or component-wisely. However, they ignore the difference between glyphs in different styles and the similarity of glyphs in the same style, which results in artifacts such as local distortions and style inconsistency. To address this issue, we propose a novel font generation approach by learning the Difference between different styles and the Similarity of the same style (DS-Font). We introduce contrastive learning to consider the positive and negative relationship between styles. Specifically, we propose a multi-layer style projector for style encoding and realize a distinctive style representation via our proposed Cluster-level Contrastive Style (CCS) loss. In addition, we design a multi-task patch discriminator, which comprehensively considers different areas of the image and ensures that each style can be distinguished independently. We conduct qualitative and quantitative evaluations comprehensively to demonstrate that our approach achieves significantly better results than state-of-the-art methods.