

Adobe integrated Google’s new Nano Banana Pro image model into Firefly and Photoshop, extending Google’s Gemini 3 Pro image technology into widely used creative tools. The move gives Creative Cloud Pro and Firefly plan subscribers access to unlimited image generations with Firefly and partner models in-app until December 1.
Adobe now routes Nano Banana Pro into Firefly and Photoshop alongside its own image models. Users can generate and edit images directly inside existing workflows. Adobe stated that subscribers can create unlimited images with Firefly models and partner engines, including Google’s latest model, during the rollout window.
Nano Banana Pro builds on the earlier Nano Banana (Gemini 2.5 Flash Image) release. Google positions the new version as a higher-fidelity model for production assets. It supports text prompts that refine specific image regions, adjust aspect ratios, shift camera angles, and modify lighting. Adobe highlighted these editing controls as a way to keep creators in charge while they work inside Firefly and Photoshop.
The model also powers cleaner text inside images. It supports accurate rendering of titles, labels, and localized copy, which matters for campaigns and educational graphics. According to Adobe’s statement, the integration aims to pair Google’s image engine with Adobe’s editing stack, giving customers another “best-in-class” option inside the same interface.
Google built Nano Banana Pro on the Gemini 3 Pro image stack and linked it to Google Search. The company notes that the model can research topics from a prompt and then generate visuals that reflect real-world facts. This design targets maps, diagrams, and infographics where incorrect details can cause problems in training manuals or technical guides.
The model also focuses on multilingual output. It renders text in multiple languages and can translate existing text inside an image while keeping the layout and design intact. Google positions this capability as a way to localize campaigns faster and adapt product visuals for different markets without redesigning from scratch.
Brand consistency remains another key theme. Nano Banana Pro accepts up to 14 reference images in a single prompt. Designers can upload logos, color schemes, character sheets, and product photos at once. The expanded visual context window then guides the model toward the desired style. Google describes this approach as “few-shot prompting” for visual identity, with support for images up to 4K resolution.
Google also stresses responsible use. Nano Banana Pro and Nano Banana sit under a shared responsibility framework and apply SynthID watermarking to every generated asset. The company plans to add copyright indemnification at general availability to support commercial adoption.
Also Read: Adobe AI Tools Launches Firefly for Voice-Generated Sound Effects
Google already offers Nano Banana Pro through Vertex AI and Google Workspace and plans to bring it to Gemini Enterprise. Design and marketing platforms are also integrating the model. Adobe, Canva, Figma, Photoroom, and others now use it as a core engine for image editing and content generation.
Executives at these companies point to several recurring use cases. Canva cites multilingual text rendering as crucial for global design projects. Figma highlights perspective shifts, lighting changes, and scene variations that still keep style and characters consistent. Photoroom reports improvements in virtual fashion models and fabric changes for retail clients.
Agencies and brands also describe more efficient production workflows. Creative teams use Nano Banana Pro for complex product swaps, background adjustments, and upscaling while preserving identity features. Companies such as Pencil, HubX, and Klarna report that the model supports high-volume campaign work and reduces the gap between concept and final asset.
With the Adobe Firefly and Photoshop integration, Nano Banana Pro now reaches a broader segment of designers and content creators. The rollout links Google’s Gemini 3 Pro image technology with established creative software while keeping search grounding, localization, and brand control at the center of the experience.