أفضل ذكاء اصطناعي لـ Edit or retouch an existing photo
Retouch, edit, or modify an existing photo — remove objects, change lighting, fix imperfections, or extend the canvas using AI.
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe Photoshop is the standard for serious photo retouching, and its Firefly-powered Generative Fill is the most capable AI editing surface inside any pro image tool. It handles judgment-heavy work — object removal, composite cleanup, edge repair, skin work — with non-destructive layer-based corrections you can refine. For specific generative edits where Photoshop is overkill, Nano Banana Pro is a strong complement. If you don't have access to Photoshop, Photopea is a free browser-based alternative with similar Generative Fill capabilities — though output quality is lower.
افتح Adobe PhotoshopIn Photoshop with Generative Fill (or any AI photo editor): 1. Select the area you want to edit (Lasso, Rectangular Select, or Quick Selection) 2. Choose Edit > Generative Fill 3. In the prompt box, describe ONLY the change you want: Examples of good prompts: - "Remove the person on the left" - "Change the sky to overcast" - "Extend the road into the distance" - "Add soft window light from the right" - "Fill this area with matching grass" Tips: - Square selections give better results than irregular shapes - Keep prompts short — describe the result, not the process - Generate 3-4 variations and pick the best - For object removal: include some surrounding pixels in the selection
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Original photo: a beach scene with a clearly visible photo-bombing person in the upper-left corner. Edit attempt: select the person with Lasso, type "remove person", generate. Result: the person is removed, but the patch where they stood now shows water that's lighter blue than the surrounding water, with no waves matching the rest of the scene. The horizon line behind them is slightly off — bent upward by a few pixels. To anyone looking carefully, it's obvious something used to be there.
Original photo: same beach scene, photo-bombing person upper-left. Process: 1. Selection: rectangular box around the person, expanded by 40 pixels on every side to give the AI overlapping water and horizon to reference. Square shape, not Lasso — Generative Fill produces cleaner edges with rectangular selections. 2. Prompt: "ocean water with matching wave pattern and horizon line". Short, specific to what should be there, not "remove person" (which is what you want, not what the AI generates). 3. Generated 4 variations. Selected the one where the wave crests align with the rest of the photo. 4. Cleanup pass: subtle Curves adjustment on the patched area to match brightness (was 4 stops brighter — generated water tends to be slightly lighter). Added film grain at 3% to match the source. Used the Healing Brush along the horizon line to smooth a 2-pixel transition. Result: zooming to 100% on the area, you can find the patch only because you know where to look. The wave timing matches. The horizon is continuous. A reviewer who didn't know the original would not flag this image.
Nano Banana Pro
Better when you need a single targeted generative edit and don't want to open a Photoshop subscription for it. Natural-language inputs, no layer setup, fast turnaround on specific 'change this part of the image' jobs.
افتح Nano Banana Proالأسئلة الشائعة
Can AI photo editing replace a professional retoucher?
For batch work and obvious fixes — yes. For high-end commercial retouching (fashion editorials, beauty campaigns, brand-critical edits) — no. AI gets you 80% there fast; the last 20% still needs human judgment to handle texture, edge artifacts, and brand consistency.
How do I avoid the AI look in retouched photos?
Always normalize lighting, color, and noise after generative fill — generated pixels often don't match the source perfectly. Use a soft brush at 30-50% opacity to blend edges. Match grain to the original photo at 100% zoom.
What's the best free alternative to Photoshop's Generative Fill?
Photopea (in-browser, has its own generative fill). Pixlr (cloud-based with AI tools). For object removal specifically, Cleanup.pictures works well and is free. None match Photoshop's polish, but they're enough for casual use.