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What You See Is What You Wear: Crafting Garments for Diverse Avatars with Consistent Wearing Effects

  • Zan Wang
  • , Anqi Li
  • , Yixuan Li
  • , Wei Liang*
  • , Bing Ning
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Beijing Institute of Technology
  • Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In immersive VR applications, avatars shape users' identities and social presence. Personalization requires generating realistic outfits for avatars, often specified through a single reference image, while supporting seamless editing, adaptation to diverse avatars, and efficient rendering. Achieving these goals is challenging because VR avatars, even humanoid ones, exhibit substantial variations in body shapes and topologies. This inherent diversity makes it difficult to collect sufficient paired data, impeding the evolution of generalizable end-to-end image-to-garment models. To this end, we propose Tailor, a two-stage framework that dresses 3D humanoid avatars from a single reference image while preserving the wearing effects observed in the image. In the first stage, Tailor leverages a structured garment representation based on sewing patterns, enabling the network to predict garments in a low-dimensional, interpretable, and topology-independent space. In the second stage, Tailor performs instance-specific optimization to adapt the predicted sewing pattern to the avatar, ensuring consistent wearing effects across varying avatars. Furthermore, this framework also enables seamless garment editing, on-the-fly adaptation, and real-time rendering, making it particularly suitable for large-scale VR environments. Extensive experiments demonstrate that Tailor achieves results comparable to professional manual designs and produces garments that are both visually appealing and better aligned with reference styles than those generated by naive pattern-scaling baselines, as validated through human perceptual studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4408-4418
Number of pages11
JournalIEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics
Volume32
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2026

Keywords

  • Digital Garment
  • Sewing Pattern
  • Virtual Avatar

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