I’ve not used Adobe Illustrator in over a year even though I use vector art when creating projects for laser cutters (I tend to use the xTool and Glowforge propriety apps). But a demo at Adobe MAX 2024 showing the new AI tools for Illustrator has me itching to get back into vector art.
The demo by illustrator Michael Fugoso showed how you can take a simple image or digital painting, this time a raster illustration made in Adobe Fresco, and use the new Enhanced Image Trace tool to convert the image to a vector. The final image includes anchor points to quickly edit the lines.
The final image included a gradient that could be smoothed in one click and even adjusted in strength and tone live and non-destructively with an easy slider. (The MAX audience cooed a little at this point.)
I could immediately see myself making good use of the new Enhanced Image Trace tool, as someone who doesn’t regularly create vector art. I prefer to doodle in Procreate or my new favourite, Heavy Paint, but Adobe‘s new tool for Illustrator looks like a genuinely helpful use of generative AI. I can now take my existing images and convert them to vectors at a click, ideal for sending to a laser cutter to engrave onto wood.
A further reveal in the Adobe MAX 2024 Illustrator demo showed how the new Project Neo web app, currently in beta but revealed as a sneak at last year’s Adobe MAX, enables simple 3D models to be created then easily sent to Illustrator, where again they’re turned into vector files to comp into a scene.
Project Neo looks a little a Womp – a browser-based 3D modelling app Beth has been having fun with – but comes with the added benefit of connecting directly into Illustrator (models can be made and sent at a click). Project Neo has been designed to encourage 2D artists to get into 3D art, and with simple splicing and modelling tools basic sculpts can be created in seconds.
Combining Project Neo and Enhanced Image Trace, I’m leaning into getting back into Illustrator. Adobe’s push for adding generative AI into its core apps is now finding some handy use cases I was a little sceptical of for some time.