 Hello everyone, welcome back to another AI video. In this one, we're in Adobe Firefly Image 2. It's in beta, it should be coming out of beta soon. Gonna show you how to create your own stock images, custom stock images the way you want them, and you'll never have to pay for them ever again. So Getty Images and all those silly places that sell you three images for $46,000 or whatever the heck they got going on over there. Goodbye, here we go. So here are some examples. I've got a businessman getting ready for a presentation and it's done a fantastic job. Look at this, this guy looks all pensive and everything is good on him except for his fingers. Yeah, his fingers aren't quite right. I will show you how to edit them. So not only are we gonna create our own stock images, I'll show you how to edit them and get them right. Here's another good one here. He's looking down doing this thing. Maybe his pinky finger's a little thicker than it might want it to be, but hey, we'll fix that as well. Here's another one we got basically Captain America, but Blonde and well, he goes to work businessman type thing. But anyways, and another great one here. So these are all great images. So how do we do it and then how do we edit and fix them? Let me show you. Okay, first step, we're gonna go to firefly.adobe.com. So I'm gonna put a link in the description. So it's firefly.adobe.com. And when you get here, you get a few options. Click on Text to Image. When you do that, you can get in two ways. You'll see a whole big, great, big place of all these different styles and ideas. But in this one, I wanna show you, look at this regal kitty cat. I wanna show you stock images. So I'm just gonna type in what I want, right here under prompt at the bomb. And I'll be, I don't know, man reading a book in his office, whatever. Something like that. I mean, I don't even know what stock images are supposed to do anymore. I mean, I guess that's a stock image. What are the best ones? Like, business woman reading her tablet in front of a computer at night. I don't know. Oh, it's a crazy amount. But anyways, here we go. So here are the first four cracks at it. And to be fair, they've done a pretty good job. His fingers aren't quite right. Well, we could fix that if we wanted to. This one's got a little bit too much light in it and a little too high contrast. But again, I'm gonna show you the right way. And this guy looks like he's looking at off into space. Maybe, yeah, I don't know. And this one's actually not too bad. So anyways, what you wanna do though is once you've generated your first image, you actually wanna take this visual intensity down to zero, at least at this time. And now re-roll it or click on generate and then generate it again. And once you do that, it's gonna take out some of the stylization and it's gonna be more photorealistic, which is what we're actually looking for. So once this is done rolling, now we should be getting a little bit closer to what we want. Okay, and you'll also notice that photo has a check mark beside it. So it's going photorealistic. So this one is quite good, although his left glass there could use a little work. Good one, this one is not too bad. This one's pretty good. And this one is quite good, although the book's green and a little weird looking. But either way, we can go with that. So let's say this is the one we want. Okay, good, we like it, but maybe we wanna work on his hand here a little more and this looks like a watch, but it's not a very good watch. So anyways, what you can do is you can go up here to the top left. And when I click on that, we get six options. Now, the bottom three are generic and they're really, really good, but you've already used them in other apps. So there's nothing there to talk about. You could add text or you could put on here, hey, I'm in the office or whatever you wanna do that. You can remove background, which is basically getting rid of everything, but the subject, that works really, really well if you're creating a PNG or if you wanna create a GIF and you don't want all the office in the image and applying filters and adjustments, pure Instagram stuff. You know how this works. Now, here are the ones that matter though. Generative fill, this is the big one. This is the one that I will go to last, but this is the most important one. The one I wanna show you first is show similar. If I click on that, it's going to basically re-roll like Dungeons & Dragons style. It's gonna re-roll this image and it's gonna give us other ones that are similar to it, but not quite the same. So basically we've identified that this is one that we like and then we want other ones that are similar to it. So it's kind of like mid-journey when you click on the V button there. And then here we go. This one's pretty good, but his face isn't quite right. This one's not bad. This is our original and then this one is not so great either. So anyways, that is an option. The other one that I wanna show you real quickly here is use as style reference. So if I click on that, you'll notice here that when I click out, it's gone ahead and added in a little thumbnail and I've got man reading a book in his office. It's using this as the style reference and if I generate again, it's basically gonna use this as the reference. I guess there's no other real word for it. So there you go. This is another option, but let me show you generative fill. That's the one we really wanna go with. So let's say we really like this one here. This one looks pretty good. Let's click on this, but his eyes aren't quite right. So what I'll do now is I'll go to edit and then I'm gonna use use. I'm gonna go to generative fill, pardon me. When I do that, now we can make some changes. So I'm gonna go in here. I'm gonna click on insert and I'm just gonna hover and watch this. I'm gonna basically remove his eyes, so to speak. Wow, that sounded weird. And then you get two options. You can describe the image that you want to create. So what do I want there? Do I want him wearing sunglasses? I don't know. Or do I just leave it and let it re-roll or rethink it? So if I leave it blank, watch this. It's gonna go ahead and it's gonna try and add in something else over what I've just deleted. So I've basically gone in there and now it says, okay, what about those glasses? What about that? What about that? And if I don't like it, I can just keep on cracking at it. So remember that. I can always go in there and try again until I get something that I like. So that's one way to do it. I can go ahead and you can also decrease or increase the size of the brush and things like that. But I just wanted to show you the technique. So there we go. Okay, this one's actually not too bad. Let's see what the second one looks like. Okay, he's closing his eyes. He's squinting. And that one is not too bad either. But the first one, well, yeah, you know what? This third one is not bad if we zoom in. The only problem is this eye isn't quite right. So I would just go ahead and I would go ahead and I would keep that. And then look, I'm gonna go ahead and just kind of go over this part here. And then I would go ahead and run it again. And I know this is tedious, but this is how it works if you wanna get a stock image exactly the way you want it. Now I didn't type anything in there, but literally by doing that and these different steps, this is how you create your own stock images. You never pay for them. Once you've got something you like and I could keep doing this forever, I'll just click on download and bang, it applies the content credentials. It downloads it. If I click on this here, I can go ahead and look at it right here. Here it is, it's in my folder. And again, I can just open it and boom, we've gone it. Oh, I didn't fix his eye yet, but that is literally all there is to it to creating your own stock images, editing, adjusting them. Thanks for watching.