Photoshop Update Brings Generative AI and Adjustment Brushes Out of Beta

A person wearing a bright pink jacket smiles with their hands on their face. A close-up of Adobe Photoshop's toolbar is superimposed above their head, with the "Opacity" setting being adjusted. The Photoshop logo is also visible on the left side of the image.

Adobe has released a new Photoshop update, adding new selection and adjustment brushes, leveling up Firefly’s text-to-image from beta to public release, and improving Photoshop’s type tool.

Selection Brush Tool

First up is the new “selection brush tool,” which lets users easily select an area in their image just by brushing over it. With this new tool, users can easily create selections with various opacities and different edge feathering, which Adobe says delivers a “more seamless and nuanced effect,” ideal for compositing and when applying filters or fills to an image.

A person with curly hair wearing a shiny, bright orange jacket is standing against a light blue background, smiling with eyes closed and hands resting on their cheeks.

This tool also means users don’t need to get into the separate quick mask mode, which can be tricky for novice users to find and understand, given that it has its own dialog box and requires multiple steps.

A person with curly hair smiles with eyes closed, wearing a colorful striped sweater. On the left, a selection brush tool is shown, highlighting the selection around the person's head. On the right, the selection has been refined. The word "Hardness" appears below.

Adjustment Brush Tool

Aimed a bit more at photographers, the new adjustment brush tool has exited beta after being unveiled earlier this year, and is available to all Photoshop users.

A split image shows a man wearing round sunglasses against a pink background. The left side has yellow-tinted lenses with an adjustment brush tool and hue sliders visible. The right side shows the edited photo with blue-tinted lenses.

This feature lets photographers paint adjustments to their image, including tweaks to brightness, saturation, exposure, and more.

A butterfly with vibrant, multicolored wings is being edited in a photo editing software. The interface displays various adjustment panels and tools. The butterfly stands out in color against a black and white background.

Adobe Firefly Text-to-Image Leaves Beta, Gets Rebranded as ‘Generate Image’

Text-to-image has been inside Photoshop for a while now as a beta feature, but it’s finally available as a complete, public tool. With a fresh name, “Generate Image,” users can type a specific prompt and get AI-generated images in seconds.

A circular neon portal surrounded by vibrant and colorful coral reef, leading to a serene view of the ocean horizon under a dramatic sky filled with clouds. Brightly colored coral and marine plants frame the portal, creating a fantastical underwater scene.

Generate Image is built on the latest Adobe Firefly Image 3 Model and promises fast, improved results that are commercially safe.

A computer screen displaying an image editing software in use. The interface features multiple photos of baby orangutans in different poses, with vibrant backgrounds. The software's tools and color palettes are visible on the right and upper sections of the screen.

Photoshop users can also generate images with an uploaded reference image, and additional controls exist in the form of content type (photo or art) and style effects (movements, themes, techniques, effects, material, and concepts).

Adobe’s Approach to AI

With the full-blown release of generative text-to-image AI in Photoshop, Adobe has also redoubled its efforts to be clear about its views concerning AI. While Firefly text-to-image has been in Photoshop since last year in one form or another, there is something substantially different about it being out of beta — ready to do real, commercial work (and presumably cost generative credits).

As shared previously, Firefly is designed to be commercially safe with a creator-first approach to generative AI and only trains on licensed content, such as Adobe Stock, and public domain content where copyright has expired,” Adobe promises. “To maintain transparency in AI usage within Adobe’s applications, Firefly-powered features in Photoshop automatically attach Content Credentials to images with generated content.”

Type Tool, Better Task Bar, and Generative Fill Improvements

Rounding out the Photoshop updates are improvements to some other Photoshop features and functions. Starting with the type tool, it now supports bullets and numbering.

A person sits on top of a camper van parked on a vast, flat, and dry landscape under a bright blue sky. Text overlays the image: "Travel Plan: 1. Map it out 2. Pack it up 3. Hit the road.

The app’s contextual task bar is better now, providing quicker access to popular settings for working with shapes and transforming objects.

A person with curly hair smiles broadly, holding their face with both hands. They have bright pink eyeshadow, bold brow makeup, and wear a green top. The background is blue, and a neon yellow circle frames their head. Graphic design elements are visible.

Generative Fill, a tool photographers can use to expand an image, now has an “enhance detail” option, which promises to generate results with greater sharpness and detail.

Availability

The new Adobe Photoshop update is available now on the desktop app and through Photoshop on the web.


Image credits: Adobe

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