Adobe is ushering in the next generation of AI art with the next version of Premiere Pro.
It's been about two years since Midjourney introduced AI art. This AI art consists of art generated entirely from scratch, as well as “in-paint” and “out-paint.” Outpainting gained attention because AI art was essentially used to extend the boundaries of photography and painting, creating plausible additions to things that don't exist. Now Adobe is doing the same thing with Premiere Pro.
On Monday, Adobe showed off a video version of what it calls “Generative Fill.” This is the same technology the company uses for Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Firefly generative AI art. If you “crop” a photo outside of the border, Photoshop will expand it. You can also remove or replace elements in your photo, such as replacing a crown with a baseball cap.
Generative AI within Premiere Pro will do something similar, Adobe said. In the demo video shown below, Adobe shows how Premiere allows editors to select objects in a scene (using Magic Lasso) and remove them from an entire clip spanning multiple frames. Masu. Similarly, editors can also use her AI-powered generative fills to “enhance” scenes. In the demonstration, this enhancement is applied to a calm, focused shot of her single figure, but I think it's most effective in this application as well. Adding complex motions and transitions becomes much more difficult. It's not yet clear if Adobe has that capability.

Adobe/YouTube
But Adobe is also showing off its own text-to-video generation tools, which it calls Firefly extensions. Users will be able to create small video clips from text prompts.Adobe is Also Demonstrate integration with your own tools and competing AI video makers. Video editors and content creators can stitch together video clips from Sora, OpenAI's text-to-video generation AI tool, and AI videos from Runway. Adobe says they will be treated like any other video work.
Adobe also said it plans to process AI-generated footage in the same way it processes AI-generated still images, using its own internal tools or third-party AI clips. Ta. This means identifying them as AI-generated images through “content credentials.” ” logo. That logo will be saved in the file's metadata.
Finally, use AI to improve your audio editing. Use AI to identify clips as video, audio, or other data and launch the appropriate tools. Adobe says AI is also used to create audio fades by dragging clip handles.
Unfortunately, Adobe hasn't said when these new AI features will be available.
