You are on page 1of 24

Baked Ambient Occlusion

for Fur
Apurva Shah, Sajan Skaria

Pixar Animation Studios

1
Introduction

Self-shadowing critical for fur.


Brings out shape of the groom and adds dimension.
Deep shadows typically used for keys and rims.
Not so good for fills and bounces:
For multiple shadowing lights overlap areas tricky.
Expense especially for multiple lights.

2
Why Ambient Occlusion

Shadow computed from the POV of occluded


surface and not dependent on light position.
Short falloff distance captures groom detail like locks
and clumps but not tied to particular light direction.
Overlapping shadows not a problem.

3
Previous Work

Tim Fontenberry and Pat Conran from ILM


presented “Its Not Wise to Upset a Wookiee” at
Siggraph Sketches 2005.
Used half dome of lights around character and
computing deep shadows for each light.
From this an ambient occlusion and preferred
direction approximation was created.

4
Raytraced Occlusion

In our approach we use raytraced occlusion.


Tracing against fur is expensive!
Need a way to bake the result such that it still
preserves the fine fur detail.

5
Basic Approach

Wait for character groom to finish.


Bind a bake shader to the fur that runs raytraced
occlusion.
Shader stores the result in one of four point clouds
based on parametric “v” of the point being shaded.
Index into point cloud is based on scalp (s,t) of hair.
In essence we capture striated occlusion values at tip,
tip to mid, mid to root and root.

6
Basic Approach

Point clouds converted into images using “ptrender”.


Takes care of filling gaps and blending overlapping
samples.
Finally images turned into texture maps.
Baking valid as long as character groom does not
change.

7
Tip Map

8
Tip to Mid Map

9
Mid to Root Map

10
Root Map

11
Basic Approach

Ambient occlusion calculation during render time


only requires two texture lookups based on scalp (s,t)
and parametric “v” and a blend.
Practically free!
Per light control to decide wether to use deep shadow,
ambient occlusion or a combination.
Ambient occlusion some times combined with soft
body only shadow.

12
Normal Deep Shadows

13
Without any Shadows

14
Occlusion - No Shadows

15
Occlusion - Soft Body Shadows

16
What About Motion?

Baking was done based on rest pose.


However it worked for an arbitrary pose because the
occlusion distance was quite short.
This captured the fur grooming details but not the
body pose.
It held up well in motion.

17
All Lights

18
Key with Deep Shadow

19
Fill & Bounce - No Occlusion

20
Fill & Bounce - Baked Occlusion

21
All Lights

22
Conclusion

Baking fur occlusion was the last step in the character


build.
Took two to three hours and was often spread out
over multiple processors.
Used pretty much through out the film any time you
see a rat.

23
Acknowledgments

Bill Reeves for wiring up the occlusion into the build.


Stefan Gronsky for testing from the lighting end.

24

You might also like