CVJul 20, 2023

Reference-based Painterly Inpainting via Diffusion: Crossing the Wild Reference Domain Gap

Georgia Tech
arXiv:2307.10584v15 citationsh-index: 55
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of creative image editing for artists and designers by enabling novel object implantation in paintings, though it is incremental as it builds on existing diffusion models.

The paper tackles the problem of inpainting artworks with objects from photorealistic references, proposing RefPaint, a diffusion framework that handles large domain gaps and produces significantly better results than existing methods.

Have you ever imagined how it would look if we placed new objects into paintings? For example, what would it look like if we placed a basketball into Claude Monet's ``Water Lilies, Evening Effect''? We propose Reference-based Painterly Inpainting, a novel task that crosses the wild reference domain gap and implants novel objects into artworks. Although previous works have examined reference-based inpainting, they are not designed for large domain discrepancies between the target and the reference, such as inpainting an artistic image using a photorealistic reference. This paper proposes a novel diffusion framework, dubbed RefPaint, to ``inpaint more wildly'' by taking such references with large domain gaps. Built with an image-conditioned diffusion model, we introduce a ladder-side branch and a masked fusion mechanism to work with the inpainting mask. By decomposing the CLIP image embeddings at inference time, one can manipulate the strength of semantic and style information with ease. Experiments demonstrate that our proposed RefPaint framework produces significantly better results than existing methods. Our method enables creative painterly image inpainting with reference objects that would otherwise be difficult to achieve. Project page: https://vita-group.github.io/RefPaint/

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