Suggestive Contour Gallery
The following are some images with suggestive contours, together with
(in most cases) the 3D models from which they were created.  All models
linked here are believed to be redistributable for research and
noncommercial use, but remain under copyright by their creators
and are collected here purely for convenience (standard disclaimers apply).
All images were produced using rtsc.
Click on any image to get a larger version.
These images may be used, with acknowledgment, for noncommercial purposes
only.
    − Szymon Rusinkiewicz, Doug DeCarlo,
Adam Finkelstein, and Anothony Santella
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: bunny
     
    Download:
    bunny.ply (69451 polygons)
 bunny2.ply (144046 polygons)
 
    Source:
    Stanford 3D Scanning Repository
     
    Notes: The first of these is the "classic" Stanford bunny,
    while the second is a new version made from the original high-resolution
    data, merged using the VRIP algorithm, and hole-filled.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: "Lucy"
     
    Download:
    lucy.ply (525814 polygons)
 
    Source:
    Stanford 3D Scanning Repository
     
    Notes: This a decimated version of the slightly-larger original
    (which is available at the Stanford website).
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: lion
     
    Download:
    lion.ply (367277 polygons)
 lion2.ply (367277 polygons)
 
    Source: Stanford Graphics Lab
     
    Notes: The first of these is the original, while the second has
    had its color lightened to make the lines more visible.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: santa
     
    Download:
    santa.ply (151558 polygons)
 santa2.ply (151558 polygons)
 
    Source:
    Cyberware
     
    Notes: The first of these is the original, while the second has
    had its color lightened to make the lines more visible.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: Igea artifact
     
    Download:
    igea.ply (268686 polygons)
 
    Source:
    Cyberware
     
    Notes: Is helped by quite a bit of smoothing.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: Max Planck bust
     
    Download:
    maxplanck.ply (98260 polygons)
 
    Source: MPI
     
    Notes: Try smoothing the mesh and/or increasing the thresholds.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: brain
     
    Download:
    brain.ply (36752 polygons)
 brain2.ply (588032 polygons)
 
    Notes: The first of these is the original low-resolution polygon
    mesh, while the second was produced by applying a few iterations of
    subdivision.  If you download the first one, you'll likely want to
    do the same.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: cow
     
    Download:
    cow.ply (5804 polygons)
 cow2.ply (92864 polygons)
 
    Source: Viewpoint Animation Engineering / Sun Microsystems
     
    Notes: Again, the first is the original low-resolution polygon
    mesh, while the second has been subdivided.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: elephant
     
    Download:
    elephant.ply (39290 polygons)
 elephant2.ply (157160 polygons)
 
    Source: Espona
     
    Notes: The second is a subdivided, smoothed version of the first.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: hippo
     
    Download:
    hippo.ply (46202 polygons)
 
    Source: Espona
     
    Notes: Try subdividing and/or smoothing the mesh.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: pear
     
    Download:
    pear.ply (21504 polygons)
 
    Source: Modeled by Rob Kalnins for the
    WYSIWYG NPR project.
   |  | 
 
 
|  |  |   | 
    Model: torus
     
    Download:
    torus.ply (9600 polygons)
 |  | 
 
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