A tool called Generative Fill is available for testing in beta, but will be available to the general public in a few months.
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Adobe is announcing a “magic new way of working” in Photoshop that lets you add or remove objects from a photo, and expand image content with simple text cues. Generative Fill is based on the Firefly software that Adobe announced in March.
Adobe Firefly is the next generation of generative AI to be used in Photoshop, After Effects and Premiere Pro. The model has a multimodal character and can create audio, video, illustrations, fonts and 3D models based on text prompts.
“Generative Fill combines the speed and lightness of generative AI with the power and precision of Photoshop, allowing customers to bring their ideas to life at the speed of their imagination,” said Ashley Still, senior vice president of digital media at Adobe.
Generative Fill received similar functions to DALL-E 2: inpainting (generating AI content inside the image) and outpainting (generating AI content outside the image).
For example, if you want the sky in your image to look surreal, write “surreal sky with strange colors” in the query, and the AI will give you a ready-made option. Or, if you’ve taken a photo and want a wider aspect ratio, you can select an area outside the image and tell the generative tool to expand the scene.
Adobe says that Generative Fill will maintain the perspective, lighting, and style of the original photo.
Adobe’s model differs from other software in that it learned from Adobe Stock images and “other public domain content without copyright restrictions” to avoid problems and widely use AI-generated results.
In addition, as part of the Content Credentials initiative, AI images created in Photoshop will contain an invisible digital signature indicating that they are generated by artificial intelligence. You can verify content at verify.contentauthenticity.org.
Source: Engadget, The Verge