Sunday, 2024 November 24

AI brings color to 100-year-old video of old Beijing

About 100 years ago, a Canadian photographer wandered around Beijing to record life in China’s capital city. The rare black-and-white footage captured a time when people still traveled on camels and rickshaws, and men wore their hair in long braids in the back.

Now a Chinese indie game developer has given this old, grainy video a facelift using AI technology.

DGSpitzer said on Bilibili that he combined several AI tools to bring history back to life. DeOldify, a machine learning system, was used to add color to the black-and-white footage. The DAIN algorithm, created by researchers from the US and China, adds artificial frames to the video to bring it up to 60 frames per second, on par with frame rates offered by shooting on modern smartphones. ESGRAN, another AI system, was used to create realistic texture to the film to boost its resolution. Music was also added for effect.

The results aren’t perfect—you won’t mistake it for a movie shot with modern equipment. While adding frames and color helps the video feel more authentic and intimate than you would expect from a century-old film, the edges of the people and objects seem blurrier. If you want to see the difference, make sure to check out the original footage here.

DGSpitzer says his project was based on tutorials by Denis Shiryaev, who used AI tools earlier this year to upscale the 1896 silent film L’Arrivée d’un train en gare de La Ciotat (Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station) to similar effect. According to urban legend, the 45-second clip startled 19th-century moviegoers who thought the train in the film was going to burst out of the screen and barrel straight into them.

This story was originally published by Abacus News.

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