For the longest time, Firefly users’ #1 request was to use images to guide composition of new images. Now that Firefly Video has arrived, you can use a reference image to guide the creation of video. Here’s a slick little demo from Paul Trani:
These changes, reported by Forbes, sound like reasonable steps in the right direction:
Starting now, Google will be adding invisible watermarks to images that have been edited on a Pixel using Magic Editor’s Reimagine feature that lets users change any element in an image by issuing text prompts.
The new information will show up in the AI Info section that appears when swiping up on an image in Google Photos.
The feature should make it easier for users to distinguish real photos from AI-powered manipulations, which will be especially useful as Reimagined photos continue to become more realistic.
But how do we go from ironic laughs to actual usefulness? Krea is taking a swing by integrating (I think) the Flux imaging model with the DeepSeek LLM:
Krea Chat is here.
a brand new way of creating images and videos with AI.
It doesn’t yet offer the kind of localized refinements people want (e.g. “show me a dog on the beach,” then “put a hat on the dog” and don’t change anything outside the hat area). Even so, it’s great to be able to create an image, add a photo reference to refine it, and then create a video. Here’s my cute, if not exactly accurate, first attempt. 🙂
Wow—check out this genuinely amazing demo from my old friend (and former Illustrator PM) Mordy:
In this video, I show how you can use Gemini in the free Google AI Studio as your own personal tutor to help you get your work done. After you watch me using it to learn how to take a sketch I made on paper to recreating a logo in Illustrator, I promise you’ll be running to do the same.
We propose MatAnyone, a robust framework tailored for target-assigned video matting. Specifically, building on a memory-based paradigm, we introduce a consistent memory propagation module via region-adaptive memory fusion, which adaptively integrates memory from the previous frame. This ensures semantic stability in core regions while preserving fine-grained details along object boundaries.
Users can enter search terms like “a person skating with a lens flare” to find corresponding clips within their media library. Adobe says the media intelligence AI can automatically recognize “objects, locations, camera angles, and more,” alongside spoken words — providing there’s a transcript attached to the video. The feature doesn’t detect audio or identify specific people, but it can scrub through any metadata attached to video files, which allows it to fetch clips based on shoot dates, locations, and camera types. The media analysis runs on-device, so doesn’t require an internet connection, and Adobe reiterates that users’ video content isn’t used to train any AI models.
Goodbye, endless scrolling. Hello, AI-powered search panel. With the all-new Media Intelligence in #PremierePro (beta), the content of your clips is automatically recognized, including objects, locations, camera angles & more. Just input your search to find exactly what you need. pic.twitter.com/cOYXDKKaFI
Putting the proverbial chocolate in the peanut butter, those fast-moving kids at Krea have combined custom model training with 3D-guided image generation. Generation is amazingly fast, and the results are some combo of delightful & grotesque (aka “…The JNack Story”). Check it out:
God help you, though, if you import your photo & convert it to 3D for use with the realtime mode. (Who knew I was Cletus the Slack-Jawed Yokel?) pic.twitter.com/nuesUOZ1Db
Here’s another interesting snapshot of progress in our collective speedrun towards generative storytelling. It’s easy to pick on the shortcomings, but can you imagine what you’d say upon seeing this in, say, the olden times of 2023?
The creator writes,
Introducing The Heist – Directed by Jason Zada. Every shot of this film was done via text-to video with Google Veo 2. It took thousands of generations to get the final film, but I am absolutely blown away by the quality, the consistency, and adherence to the original prompt. When I described “gritty NYC in the 80s” it delivered in spades – CONSISTENTLY. While this is still not perfect, it is, hands down, the best video generation model out there, by a long shot. Additionally, it’s important to add that no VFX, no clean up, no color correction has been added. Everything is straight out of Veo 2. Google DeepMind
Here’s a nice write-up covering this paper. It’ll be interesting to dig into the details of how it compares to previous work (see category). [Update: The work comes in part from Adobe Research—I knew those names looked familiar :-)—so here’s hoping we see it in Photoshop & other tools soon.]
this is wild..
this new AI relighting tool can detect the light source in the 3D environment of your image and relight your character, the shadows look so realistic..
Part 9,201 of me never getting over the fact we were working on stuff like this 2 years ago at Adobe (modulo the realtime aspect, which is rad) & couldn’t manage to ship it. It’ll be interesting to see whether the Krea guys (and/or others) pair this kind of interactive-quality rendering with a really high-quality pass, as NVIDIA demonstrated last week using Flux.
3D arrived to Krea.
this new feature lets you turn images into 3D objects and use them in our Real-time tool.
Powered by advanced AI, TRELLIS enables users to create high-quality, customizable 3D objects effortlessly using simple text or image prompts. This innovation promises to improve 3D design workflows, making it accessible to professionals and beginner alike. Here are some examples:
Alpha channels are crucial for visual effects (VFX), allowing transparent elements like smoke and reflections to blend seamlessly into scenes. We introduce TransPixar, a method to extend pretrained video models for RGBA generation while retaining the original RGB capabilities. […] Our approach effectively generates diverse and consistent RGBA videos, advancing the possibilities for VFX and interactive content creation.
The world moves on, and now NVIDIA has teamed up with Black Forest Labs to enable 3D-conditioned image generation. Check out this demo (starting around 1:31:48):
For users interested in integrating the FLUX NIM microservice into their workflows, we have collaborated with NVIDIA to launch the NVIDIA AI Blueprint for 3D-guided generative AI. This packaged workflow allows users to guide image generation by laying out a scene in 3D applications like Blender, and using that composition with the FLUX NIM microservice to generate images that adhere to the scene. This integration simplifies image generation control and showcases what’s possible with FLUX models.
The Former Bird App™ is of course awash in mediocre AI-generated video creations, so it’s refreshing to see what a gifted filmmaker (in this case Ruairi Robinson) can do with emerging tools (in this case Google Veo)—even if that’s some slithering horror I’d frankly rather not behold!
I’ve long wanted—and advocated for building—this kind of flexible, spatial way to compose & blend among ideas. Here’s to new ideas for using new tools.
Supporting Non-Linear Exploration
Creative exploration rarely follows a straight line. The graph structure naturally affords exploration by allowing users to diverge at various points, creating new forks of possible alternatives. As more exploration occurs, the graph grows… pic.twitter.com/Yq18Caj94T
It’s a touch odd to me that Meta is investing here while also shutting down the Meta Spark AR lens platform, but I guess interest in lenses has broadly faded, and AI interpretation of images may prove to be more accessible & scalable. (I wonder what’ll be its Dancing Hot Dog moment.)
I love seeing exactly how Chad Nelson was able to construct a Little Big Planet-inspired game world through some creative prompting & tweening in Open AI’s new Sora video creation model. Check out his exploratory process:
Director Matan Cohen-Grumi shows off the radical acceleration in VFX-heavy storytelling that’s possible through emerging tools—including Pika’s new Scene Ingredients:
For 10 years, I directed TV commercials, where storytelling was intuitive—casting characters, choosing locations, and directing scenes effortlessly. When I shifted to AI over a year ago, the process felt clunky—hacking together solutions, spending hours generating images, and… pic.twitter.com/pJUamLFgWI
Instead of generating images with long, detailed text prompts, Whisk lets you prompt with images. Simply drag in images, and start creating.
Whisk lets you input images for the subject, one for the scene and another image for the style. Then, you can remix them to create something uniquely your own, from a digital plushie to an enamel pin or sticker.
The blog post gives a bit more of a peek behind the scenes & sets some expectations:
Since Whisk extracts only a few key characteristics from your image, it might generate images that differ from your expectations. For example, the generated subject might have a different height, weight, hairstyle or skin tone. We understand these features may be crucial for your project and Whisk may miss the mark, so we let you view and edit the underlying prompts at any time.
In our early testing with artists and creatives, people have been describing Whisk as a new type of creative tool — not a traditional image editor. We built it for rapid visual exploration, not pixel-perfect edits. It’s about exploring ideas in new and creative ways, allowing you to work through dozens of options and download the ones you love.
And yes, uploading a 19th-century dog illustration to generate a plushie dancing an Irish jig is definitely the most JNack way to squander precious work time do vital market research. 🙂
I’m a near-daily user of Ideogram to create all manner of images—mainly goofy dad jokes to (ostensibly) entertain my family. Now they’re enabling batch creation to facilitate creation of lots of variations (e.g. versions of a logo):
Check out this wild video-to-video demo from Nathan Shipley:
Sora Remix test: Scissors to crane
Prompt was “Close up of a curious crane bird looking around a beautiful nature scene by a pond. The birds head pops into the shot and then out.” pic.twitter.com/CvAkdkmFBQ
Just a taste of the torrent the blows past daily on The Former Bird App:
Rodin 3D: “Rodin 3D AI can create stunning, high-quality 3D models from just text or image inputs.”
Trellis 3D: “Iterative prompting/mesh editing. You can now prompt ‘remove X, add Y, Move Z, etc.’… Allows decoding to different output formats: Radiance Fields, 3D Gaussians, and meshes.”
Blender GPT: “Generating 3D assets has never been easier. Here’s me putting together an entire 3D scene in just over a minute.”
This might be the world’s lowest-key demo of what promises to be truly game-changing technology!
I’ve tried a number of other attempts at unlocking this capability (e.g. Meta.ai (see previous), Playground.com, and what Adobe sneak-peeked at the Firefly launch in early 2023), but so far I’ve found them all more unpredictable & frustrating than useful. Could Gemini now have turned the corner? Only hands-on testing (not yet broadly available) will tell!
Diffusion models are ushering in what feels like a golden(-hour) age in relighting (see previous). Among the latest offerings is LumiNet:
[6/7] Here are a few more random relighting!
How accurate are these results? That’s very hard to answer at the moment But our tests on the MIT dataset, our user study, plus qualitative results all point to us being on the right track.
What if your design tool could understand the meaning & importance of words, then help you style them accordingly?
I’m delighted to say that for what I believe is the first time ever, that’s now possible. For the last 40 years of design software, apps have of course provided all kinds of fonts, styles, and tools for manual typesetting. What they’ve lacked is an understanding of what words actually mean, and consequently of how they should be styled in order to map visual emphasis to semantic importance.
In Microsoft Designer, you can now create a new text object, then apply hierarchical styling (primary, secondary, tertiary) based on AI analysis of word importance:
I’d love to hear what you think. You can go to designer.microsoft.com, create a new document, and add some text. Note: The feature hasn’t yet been rolled out to 100% of users, so it may not yet be available to you—but even in that case it’d be great to hear your thoughts on Designer in general.
This feature came about in response to noticing that text-to-image models are not only learning to spell well (check out some examples I’ve gathered on Pinterest), but can also set text with varied size, position, and styling that’s appropriate to the importance of each word. Check out some of my Ideogram creations (which you can click on & remix using the included prompts):
These results of course incredible (imagine seeing any of this even three years ago!), but they’re just flat images, not editable text. Our new feature, by contrast, leverages semantic understanding and applies it to normal text objects.
What we’ve shipped now is just the absolute tip of the iceberg: to start we’re simply applying preset values based on word hierarchy, but you can readily imagine richer layouts, smart adaptive styling, and much more. Stay tuned—and let us know what you’d like to see!
Speaking of Kling, the new Motion Brush feature enables smart selection, generative fill, and animation all in one go. Check out this example, and click into the thread for more:
Kling AI 1.5 Motion Brush is incredible.
You can give different motions to multiple subjects in the same scene.
Accurately rendering clothing on humans, and especially estimating their dimensions to enable proper fit (and thus reduce costly returns), has remained a seductive yet stubbornly difficult problem. I’ve written previously about challenges I observed at Google, plus possible steps forward.
Now Kling is promising to use generative video to pair real people & real outfits for convincing visualization (but not fit estimation). Check it out:
We present FlipSketch, a system that brings back the magic of flip-book animation — just draw your idea and describe how you want it to move! …
Unlike constrained vector animations, our raster frames support dynamic sketch transformations, capturing the expressive freedom of traditional animation. The result is an intuitive system that makes sketch animation as simple as doodling and describing, while maintaining the artistic essence of hand-drawn animation.
Oh, I love this one!
FlipSketch can generate sketch animations from static drawings using text prompts!
I’m finding the app (which is free to try for a couple of moves, but which quickly runs out of credits) to be pretty wacky, as it continuously regenerates elements & thus struggles with identity preservation. The hero vid looks cool, though:
BlendBox AI: Seamlessly Blend Multiple Images with Ease
It makes blending images effortless and precise.
The real-time previews let us fine tune edits instantly, and we can generate images with AI or import our own Images.
We present ReCapture, a method for generating new videos with novel camera trajectories from a single user-provided video. Our method allows us to re-generate the source video, with all its existing scene motion, from vastly different angles and with cinematic camera motion.
They note that ReCapture is substantially different from other work. Existing methods can control camera either on images or on generated videos and not arbitrary user-provided videos. Check it out:
Here’s a bit more on how the new editing features work:
We’re testing two new features today: our image editor for uploaded images and image re-texturing for exploring materials, surfacing, and lighting. Everything works with all our advanced features, such as style references, character references, and personalized models pic.twitter.com/jl3a1ZDKNg
I’ve become an Ideogram superfan, using it to create imagery daily, so I’m excited to kick the tires on this new interactive tool—especially around its ability to synthesize new text in the style of a visual reference.
Today, we’re introducing Ideogram Canvas, an infinite creative board for organizing, generating, editing, and combining images.
Bring your face or brand visuals to Ideogram Canvas and use industry-leading Magic Fill and Extend to blend them with creative, AI-generated content. pic.twitter.com/m2yjulvmE2
You can upload your own images or generate new ones within Canvas, then seamlessly edit, extend, or combine them using industry-leading Magic Fill (inpainting) and Extend (outpainting) tools. Use Magic Fill and Extend to bring your face or brand visuals to Ideogram Canvas and blend them with creative, AI-generated elements. Perfect for graphic design, Ideogram Canvas offers advanced text rendering and precise prompt adherence, allowing you to bring your vision to life through a flexible, iterative process.
Filmmaker & Pika Labs creative director Matan Cohen Grumi makes this town look way more dynamic than usual (than ever?) through the power of his team’s tech:
Adobe’s new generative 3D/vector tech is a real head-turner. I’m impressed that the results look like clean, handmade paths, with colors that match the original—and not like automatic tracing of crummy text-to-3D output. I can’t wait to take it for a… oh man, don’t say it don’t say it… spin.
Oh man, for years we wanted to build this feature into Photoshop—years! We tried many times (e.g. I wanted this + scribble selection to be the marquee features in Photoshop Touch back in 2011), but the tech just wasn’t ready. But now, maybe, the magic is real—or at least tantalizingly close!
Being a huge nerd, I wonder about how the tech works, and whether it’s substantially the same as what Magnific has been offering (including via a Photoshop panel) for the last several months. Here’s how I used that on my pooch:
But even if it’s all the same, who cares?
Being useful to people right where they live & work, with zero friction, is tremendous. Generative Fill is a perfect example: similar (if lower quality) inpainting was available from DALL•E for a year+ before we shipped GenFill in Photoshop, but the latter has quietly become an indispensible, game-changing piece of the imaging puzzle for millions of people. I’d love to see compositing improvements go the same way.
As I drove the Micronaxx to preschool back in 2013, Macklemore’s “Can’t Hold Us” hit the radio & the boys flipped out, making their stuffed buddies Leo & Ollie go nuts dancing to the tune. I remember musing with Dave Werner (a fellow dad to young kids) about being able to animate said buddies.
Fast forward a decade+, and now Dave is using Adobe’s recently unveiled Firefly Video model to do what we could only dimly imagine back then: