Adobe has released its AI assistant for Adobe Photoshop in beta across web and mobile platforms. The assistant allows users to edit images through natural language prompts, enabling tasks such as removing objects, adjusting lighting, changing colors, or applying stylistic effects.
The feature, first introduced during Adobe’s MAX conference last year, can also perform actions like cropping images in specific formats, enhancing shadows, or transforming backgrounds. Paid Photoshop subscribers will have unlimited AI-assisted generations through April 9, while free users will initially receive 20 generations.
Adobe also introduced a new AI markup feature in public beta, allowing users to draw markers directly on images and instruct the assistant to modify or remove selected elements. The capability is designed to streamline editing workflows by combining manual input with AI-powered transformations.
In parallel, Adobe expanded generative editing tools within its Adobe Firefly platform. New features include generative remove, generative expand, and generative upscale, along with a one-click background removal tool. Firefly now also supports more than 25 third-party AI models, including offerings from Google, OpenAI, and Runway.
The company is also extending AI capabilities across its productivity suite, with Adobe Acrobat recently adding prompt-driven editing, presentation creation, and podcast summarization tools designed to automate document workflows and content generation.