
Adobe Wants You to Use AI to Stop Poorly Photoshopping Images
Harmonize is the newest Photoshop beta feature. Named after the photo harmonization process, the tool helps seamlessly match an image to a project by naturally blending objects into the background. It uses AI to create a new lighting environment, including adjustments to coloring and shadows. With one click of the Harmonize button, Photoshop will create a kind of invisible layer and apply it over the image, making it blend nearly perfectly with the rest of the project without destroying either image. The before-and-after shots are dramatic, and it aims to cut down what can be a grueling, detail-oriented editing process to mere minutes.
An example of what the harmonize tool can do. The original headshot (left) is illuminated to create a completely relit shot (right).
Adobe/Screenshots by Katelyn Chedraoui
Photoshop users got a peek at this tool when it was just a research concept at last fall's Adobe Max creator conference. At the time, I spoke with Adobe Applied research scientist Mengwei Ren, one of the lead engineers on the project, about what potential this tool had for Photoshop users. I followed up this month now that the feature made its official beta debut.
Old editing problems, new AI tricks
After a "very shocking" positive reaction from the Max live audience, in Ren's words, she and the Photoshop team worked to refine the tool. The beta tool, out now, was spurred on by Max and is the culmination of years of machine learning and imagery work.
"We've tried to solve it in different ways," Ren said. "We started with just trying to do relighting on faces, then we also tried a separate model for adding shadows only. At some point, because the gen AI technology is really evolving, and then we started to think wild, like, 'OK, can we really bring this into one unified model?'"
Which is part of what powers the Harmonize tool now.
In the months since Max, the team has enhanced the tool's resolution to get higher-quality outputs, created more precise controls to give users pixel-level alignment and expanded its training dataset to help the tool create accurate lighting conditions for any image. (Adobe's AI user guidelines and terms say it doesn't train on customer content and its models are trained on licensed content, including Adobe Stock and public domain content.)
Faster, smoother compositing is something the Adobe team has been working on for nearly a decade, Stephen Nielsen, senior director of product management for Photoshop, told CNET. Pre-AI era work to improve selection and background removal tools set the foundation for Harmonize. Generative AI technology helped pull all the different pieces of the puzzle together and make it quick for people to use.
"Often people talk about something being poorly Photoshopped, and a lot of it has to do with how well you match the lighting, the color tone and the shadows. This makes it so much faster, efficient and easier to achieve a really good composite," Nielsen said.
Like any beta tool, especially with AI involved, Harmonize isn't perfect. Future work will focus on maintaining a higher level of quality when being used on more intricate objects, like human faces. Preserving the identity of faces is "the trickiest thing to solve," Nielsen said, and will be an area of continued research.
"The expectation, especially from pro users, is pro commercial results. In many cases, you can get that, depending on the assets that you're combining with Harmonize. In some cases, more work needs to be done to refine the output," Joel Baer, director of product management for Photoshop, told CNET. "We know there are some [use cases] we need to continue to optimize for and continue improving."
As of now, you'll need to use the beta desktop app or web app to use any of these new AI tools. The Harmonize feature is additionally available through the Photoshop iPhone mobile app. Adobe subscription plans that include Photoshop start at $20 per month.
Read More: I Took Photoshop's Generative AI for a Spin. These Are the Tools That Stuck Out
An example shown during Adobe Max 2024. Neither person in this image was originally here. Using the harmonize tool, the lighting is adjusted for seamless visual consistency.
Adobe/Screenshot by Katelyn Chedraoui
Photoshop AI in 2025
Harmonize is the latest step on Photoshop's longer AI journey. Two other gen AI changes coming for Photoshop users are a new generative upscaling tool and upgrades to its generative remove feature. Upscaling is a common generative AI process that improves an existing image, like by clarifying and adding finer details. In this case, the Photoshop tool promises to boost image resolution up to 8 megapixels. More pixels means your imagery should be sharper and clearer.
The newly updated remove tool should be more precise when selecting objects to erase, and the affected area should blend more seamlessly for a cleaner final edit.
The goal for adding AI in Photoshop is to enhance the work of, not replace, human editors, Nielsen said. But many creators are worried about the development and deployment of generative AI, from the alleged copyright infringement taking place during model training to the AI slop filling online spaces and job security worries.
For more, check out the first AI feature in Premiere Pro and Adobe's new Indigo camera app.

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