
When Photoshop Gets Smoother – And Wack-Cool – With AI’s “Banana Boost
You know that image you have, of a day when Photoshop might work like the computer in “Star Trek”?
Choose a lighting, say, snap your fingers and there you go: It shifts the shadows; moves stuff around; cleans up text; hell, maybe it even whirls your sketch into something akin to a finished poster?
Well, the moment may be now. Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Firefly just received a massive upgrade: Nano Banana Pro – the new image-producing / manipulation model running on Gemini 3 from Google.
And the integration means that going forward, creators working in Firefly or Photoshop can borrow some of Nano Banana Pro’s muscle for more seamless, high-fidelity AI-generated visuals.
Adobe is also allowing unlimited image generations via Firefly and its partner-model pool – but only as a limited time treat (until December 1, 2025) for paying Creative Cloud Pro and Firefly subscribers.
What’s new under the hood? The model offers sharper resolution – up to 4K no less - better handling of text, layout, lighting and composition.
You could throw it a sketch, a prompt, maybe some reference photos, and get back something polished.
That’s one hell of a jump over its predecessor (Nano Banana / Gemini 2.5) which already set tongues wagging – but now we’re into full on pro-grade features here.
Similarly, if you’re doing mockups, posters, infographics or anything else that has text and complex layouts – this could also shave a lot off of your design time.
Consider being able to produce social-media visuals, ads or moodboards with a few quick changes, rather than faffing about with layers all day.
Firefly allows you to upload up to six reference images, morph them together, change angles, edit lighting - or simply generate from scratch with a prompt.
On a macro level, this feels like an inflection point for creative tools. AI image generating is no longer a side gig or “fun experiment.”
With players like Adobe and Google doubling down, it’s gearing up to be a fundamental part of the way visual content is produced. Freelance artists, marketing folks, small studios – this could be a game changer.
Still, some questions linger. Endless generation is an exciting prospect for a limited time – but what follows on December 1? Will the imposition of usage caps restrict its allure?
AI-generated images also don’t capture stylization the best, and they have a long way to go compared with real-world concept art; will it cut it for high-stakes commercial or branding work against human-crafted consistency?
All of which is to say, I’m cautiously pumped. For myself, I’d love to use Nano Banana Pro for a fast campaign mockup or a poster – just see how close it gets me to something that’s not actually how I’d spend hours.
I can go through some early user demos if you’d like and see what’s working – and what still looks a lot like, well, AI.












