Renders, photos: Gork Studio, Gork Journal
Most of you are familiar with, and some actively use, the latest Photoshop (PS) beta in their work. Compared to the standard version of PS, the beta features FireFly — an AI developed by Adobe.
FireFly includes several tools, three of which I particularly liked: generative fill, remove tool, and object selection.
Generative fill allows you to extend any picture, both over an image and on an empty field, for example, if you need to increase the crop. PS identifies the content of the image and allows you to set parameters for what you want to see. In practice, the tool works well with water (making correct reflections, light, shorelines) and also performs well in areas not heavily detailed.
The remove tool automatically identifies what is on the selected mask, such as a person, and removes it by redrawing the empty space.
Object selection is a tool that does a decent job of separating objects from the background. In practice, this eliminates the need for external services to separate people from stock images (e.g., remove bg).
I want to note that PS is indifferent to the source format (render, photo, drawing); it handles any static content you feed it well.
If you haven’t experimented with it yourself yet, I highly recommend giving it a try. It’s a very engaging activity.
@gorkjournal
Most of you are familiar with, and some actively use, the latest Photoshop (PS) beta in their work. Compared to the standard version of PS, the beta features FireFly — an AI developed by Adobe.
FireFly includes several tools, three of which I particularly liked: generative fill, remove tool, and object selection.
Generative fill allows you to extend any picture, both over an image and on an empty field, for example, if you need to increase the crop. PS identifies the content of the image and allows you to set parameters for what you want to see. In practice, the tool works well with water (making correct reflections, light, shorelines) and also performs well in areas not heavily detailed.
The remove tool automatically identifies what is on the selected mask, such as a person, and removes it by redrawing the empty space.
Object selection is a tool that does a decent job of separating objects from the background. In practice, this eliminates the need for external services to separate people from stock images (e.g., remove bg).
I want to note that PS is indifferent to the source format (render, photo, drawing); it handles any static content you feed it well.
If you haven’t experimented with it yourself yet, I highly recommend giving it a try. It’s a very engaging activity.
@gorkjournal