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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Rod Lawton

Photoshop's new AI Generative Expand tool broadens your horizons, quite literally!

Photoshop Generative Expand

With the latest Adobe Photoshop beta you can now extend the edges of your photos outside the area the camera originally captured. This Generative Fill option will fill the new areas using AI and the objects already present in the picture, or any objects you want to specify via a text prompt.

Most of the world already thinks that Photoshop is the best photo editing software you can get, so this is just going to enhance its already unassailable reputation - and builds on the Generative Fill feature introduced with the recent Photoshop beta release.

Generative Expand sounds ideal for those times when your lens wasn't quite wide enough or you shot a picture in vertical format and you need a horizontal image, or vice versa. 

This uncrop facility is not just good for fixing photo blunders, though. You can't always predict the aspect ratios you'll need for printing, and the ability to expand a 3:2 ratio image for a 16:9 video, for example, could be a lifesaver, or to expand a 3:2 DSLR image to fit a taller 10 x 8" print size.

It's all done with Adobe's Firefly AI technology, which has already been used in beta versions of Photoshop to provide its headline-grabbing Generative Fill feature, where you can use text prompts to add objects to your photos. The results from this can be pretty remarkable, and Adobe's sample images for the new Generative Expand feature look equally impressive.

Essentially, you extend the crop marquee outside the image to the new size you want and then either type in a prompt for what you want added, or leave it blank for Photoshop and Adobe's Firefly AI to work it out based on what's in your image.

(Image credit: Adobe)

Here's one of Adobe's examples. This vertical original has been extended into a much larger horizontal format image with the prompt 'Beautiful beach'. The result is pretty impressive considering the huge size increase requested.

Generative Expand can turn an upright portrait into a square one, and fill in the missing parts of the picture (Image credit: Adobe)

Here's another where this vertical headshot has been expanded horizontally. No, we haven't got this the wrong way round – the vertical shot is the original and Adobe's Generative Fill has worked out the extra hair and clothing detail needed for the expanded horizontal version.

(Image credit: Adobe)
Here a square-format image generated into a wider landscape-format image, adding in a convincing-looking background (Image credit: Adobe)

This less extreme example (above) turns a square original into a regular horizontal aspect image, adding convincing-looking background detail, including a full version of a tree on the right-hand side that's been cut off in the original.

These are all Adobe's own examples, so it's hardly surprising that they look brilliant. But Photoshop subscribers can try this out for themselves by downloading the latest version of the Photoshop beta. This doesn't replace the regular version, but is installed alongside Photoshop 2023. You'll find it in the Beta apps section of the Adobe Creative Cloud app. You can also try out Photoshop and Photoshop Beta for free for seven days- see our guide to downloading a trial version of Photoshop.

We guess that because these are still experimental features they're not going into the regular version of Photoshop until they've been fully tested – but Photoshop users have already been creating remarkable results with Adobe's Generative AI, whether it's 'finished' or not!

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