Show HN: Finding similarities in New Yorker covers (shoplurker.com)
Originally learned about image hashing and similarity comparison for product image searches. Decided to apply it to magazine covers.
Thrasher covers: https://shoplurker.com/labs/thrasher-covers/
6 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 26.0 ms ] threadAnyway, KUTGW
Also, just really cool to see quite how much diversity there has been in New Yorker front page images. Not actually that many archives that provide such a clear, easily viewable format just for browsing through all the art and looking at how the New Yorker has changed it's art style over time. Quite a few would probably qualify as "art" in and of themselves.
Also, some kind of neat discoveries while browsing through the archive. "Crazy, that looks like a Far Side ... wait, that's cause Gary Larson drew the cover." No idea Gary Larson did any magazine covers. [1]
[1] 2003-11-17, Gary Larson, https://shoplurker.com/labs/newyorker-covers/covers/2003/590...
Did something kind of similar a while back with Magic the Gathering cards, except it was using the Perceptual Hash from https://www.phash.org/ The visual clustering display (such as this example from 5th Edition [2]) I think is what some people are suggesting would be valuable. Provide an idea about "why" they're related.
[2] https://araesmojo-eng.github.io/araesmojo-html/images/Projec...
Been a long time (2018), yet pretty sure it was two dimensional "Image Feature Extraction" kinda of like this other example [3] with card colors collapsed to a single average color to give an idea of color pattern distribution.
[3] https://digitalsloan.com/project-blog/cbri