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Canva and Adobe are coming to Gemini, and they want to make everything chatty

Adobe and Canva are plugging into Google’s assistant, betting that creative work starts with a prompt, not an app icon

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Canva and Adobe are moving deeper into Google Gemini, giving the assistant a bigger role before users ever open a design app.

Adobe says its “Adobe for creativity” connector is coming to Gemini in the coming weeks, giving users a way to describe tasks and send them through Adobe tools for imaging, design, and video. Canva is already rolling out its Connected App for Gemini in select English-language markets, with full availability coming soon.

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For users, the change is practical. A campaign, mockup, social post, or image edit can begin in Gemini, then move into Canva or Adobe when the work needs branding, editing, or a more polished finish.

How much design moves into chat

Canva’s Gemini app is the more immediate move. It lets Gemini users generate and edit Canva designs, search existing Canva content, and send AI-made images into Canva as editable, layered projects.

That gives Canva a cleaner answer to a common AI image problem. A generated image can look polished until someone needs to move a logo, resize a product, change a background, or send the file to collaborators. Canva’s Magic Layers is designed to break those images into pieces users can actually adjust.

Adobe is taking a broader, more pro-tool route. Its coming Gemini connector will let users describe what they want and have Adobe’s tools across image, design, and video handle the production path, with handoffs into Firefly Boards and Creative Cloud apps.

Where Adobe still has an edge

Canva looks strongest when the job is quick branded output. That’s a natural fit for social posts, campaign assets, and team materials that need to look finished without much setup.

Adobe looks better positioned when the prompt is only the beginning. Its connector is aimed at heavier revision, from early ideation in Firefly Boards to more detailed editing in Creative Cloud. That gives Adobe a clearer path for professionals who need a working file they can refine.

The first decision could happen before either company’s app is open. That’s useful for users, but awkward for software makers that want to own the whole creative session.

What happens after the first prompt

The risk is that Gemini becomes a gatekeeper for whichever design path feels easiest. If users start projects in Google’s assistant and finish them in Canva or Adobe tools, Google gains influence over the first choice.

For Google, that’s the prize. Gemini gets more useful when it stops answering questions and starts handing users working files. For the two design rivals, the challenge is staying visible once the work starts outside their own apps.

Availability is the next thing to watch. Canva’s Gemini app is rolling out first in select English-language markets, while Adobe’s connector is expected in the coming weeks. The real test is whether starting in chat actually saves time once the edits begin.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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