Adobe expands Creative Agent across Firefly and Creative Cloud applications
Adobe is significantly enhancing its creative tools with an AI-powered "Creative Agent" integrated across Firefly and major Creative Cloud applications like Photoshop and Premiere Pro. This move aims to streamline complex tasks through natural lan...

The update strengthens Firefly's position as Adobe's central AI-powered creative platform, bringing together ideation, content creation and production workflows. At the same time, Adobe is extending access to its creative tools through third-party AI platforms including ChatGPT, Claude, Microsoft Copilot, Google Gemini and Slack.
The Creative Agent is designed to help users complete multi-step creative tasks through natural language prompts. Rather than manually carrying out repetitive actions across applications, creators can describe an intended outcome and allow the AI assistant to handle portions of the workflow.
Within Firefly, Adobe has introduced a series of new capabilities, including AI-generated brand kit creation, automated short-form product video generation, AI-assisted video rough cuts and storyboard-to-video workflows. The company has also added collaboration features that allow users to gather feedback and review content directly within Firefly.
Adobe also previewed an upgraded Firefly experience that combines content generation and editing within a single workspace. New features include Elements, which allows users to save and reuse AI-generated characters, objects and locations across projects, and Projects, a workspace designed to organise assets, prompts and creative context across Firefly and Creative Cloud applications.
The company is also bringing AI Assistants to Creative Cloud applications in public beta.
In Premiere Pro, the assistant can organise media assets, identify interview segments and create preliminary edits. Photoshop users can automate tasks such as background replacement, asset resizing and layer organisation. Illustrator users can generate multiple design variations, reorganise artwork and run print-readiness checks, while InDesign users can apply branding and layout updates across documents. In Frame.io, the assistant can help organise production assets, surface feedback and support content review workflows.
Adobe said similar capabilities are being tested in After Effects, with plans to expand agentic AI functionality across additional creative applications over time.
The announcement reflects Adobe's broader strategy of integrating its creative tools into the growing AI ecosystem rather than limiting them to its own software portfolio. By extending access through major AI assistants and workplace platforms, the company is positioning its creative capabilities to be available wherever users create and collaborate.
According to Adobe, creative AI continues to play a larger role in professional workflows, though creators still want control over final output. The company said its approach is focused on using AI to automate execution while leaving creative decisions, judgment and direction in the hands of users.
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