ABSTRACT

Converting hand-drawn sketches into clean line drawings is a crucial step for diverse artistic works such as comics and product designs. Recent data-driven methods using deep learning have shown their great abilities to automatically simplify sketches on raster images. Since it is difficult to collect or generate paired sketch and line images, lack of training data is a main obstacle to use these models. In this paper, we propose a training scheme that requires only unpaired sketch and line images for learning sketch-to-line translation. To do this, we first generate realistic paired sketch and line images from unpaired sketch and line images using rule-based line augmentation and unsupervised texture conversion. Next, with our synthetic paired data, we train a model for sketch-to-line translation using supervised learning. Compared to unsupervised methods that use cycle consistency losses, our model shows better performance at removing noisy strokes. We also show that our model simplifies complicated sketches better than models trained on a limited number of handcrafted paired data.