Adobe Integrates Its AI Assistant into Photoshop and Premiere

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Adobe Integrates Its AI Assistant into Photoshop and Premiere
After unveiling its Firefly AI Assistant at the end of April, a creative agent capable of orchestrating the Creative Cloud from a conversational interface, Adobe takes a new step this Thursday, June 18, 2026. The assistant no longer just manages applications from Firefly; it is now embedded directly within each of them, as announced back in April. Meanwhile, Firefly gains new creative skills and a reimagined studio experience.
The principle remains the same: the creator describes the expected outcome, the assistant executes the intermediate steps, and the human retains control over every decision. This demand for control is highly valued by creators who have adopted AI in their production processes.
A Creative Agent Integrated into Five Creative Cloud Applications
Adobe is rolling out its AI Assistant in public beta across Premiere, Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and Frame.io. After Effects will benefit from it in a private beta. Specifically, the assistant handles repetitive production tasks while the professional focuses on creative choices. The role of the assistant varies depending on the software:
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Premiere: sorting footage into bins, batch renaming clips, identifying interview questions, or assembling a rough cut.
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Photoshop: changing backgrounds, resizing visuals for each platform, or reorganizing layers applied to the entire composition.
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Illustrator: producing versioned files from a spreadsheet, reorganizing layers, or pre-press checks to identify color mode errors and missing fonts.
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InDesign: applying a style guide from a PDF or template, updating text, style, and pre-print checks.
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Frame.io: organizing shooting media, tracking feedback between versions, and generating B-roll.
Firefly Enhances Its Skills and Reimagines Its Creative Studio
On the Firefly side, Adobe is adding skills that are already available and accessible via the Firefly web application, designed for creators developing their brand on social media:
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Brand kit: generating a logo, identity, and palette from a simple style description.
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Product video: transforming product photos into short videos with lighting, movement, audio, and branding.
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Quick Cut: automatically assembling footage into a rough cut aligned with dialogues or narration.
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Storyboards: creating a sequence of shots, then generating video from these storyboards.
The AI Assistant in Firefly has dedicated skills for branding.
The assistant also learns user intentions over time: it can locate an asset described in natural language and learns each user's workflow preferences. Creators can now invite collaborators to provide feedback on a project before publication.
Adobe is also previewing a new version of its creative studio Firefly, currently in private beta with a waiting list, designed to maintain the context of a project from one session to another. It is built on two components: Elements, which allows saving characters, locations, and objects for reuse from one generation to the next, and Projects, which consolidates assets, generations, and creative history within Firefly and the Creative Cloud.
Platforms Where Adobe Promotes Its Creative Tools
Beyond its own applications, Adobe is making its creative tools accessible from third-party platforms:
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