The generative AI boom has helped new players like Midjourney and Stable Diffusion tap into Adobe's customer base, such as creative professionals who use Photoshop software.
The San Jose, California-based company responded by aggressively developing its own technology and integrating it into its existing portfolio of apps. It also assured customers that the images it generated were legal.
Meanwhile, the new tool announced on October 10, called “Creative Fusion,” works alongside the basic principle of generating images based on text prompts, with a feature that allows users to upload 10 to 20 photos as a reference for the output product.
Ely Greenfield, Adobe's director of digital media technology, said the company aims to allow major brands to upload images of products or characters, then use generative technology to automatically create hundreds or thousands of images, serving different requirements such as websites, social networks, advertising or print.
“Just a few months ago, this was all a manual process, from the capture to the processing of the image,” Greenfield said. “A portion of the industry will move to virtual photography, where you create images with computers. Maybe not all of it, but a large part of it. People will still take a traditional shot or do the creative work, but then they can apply generative technology to the final product.”
Also on October 10, Adobe released a vector graphics tool that is easily resizable and is often used in logo and product label design as well as other marketing tasks.
(According to Reuters)
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