Sponsored by

Adobe
Graphic & Design

Scaling Visual Content Production With Adobe’s New AI Studio Features

Scaling Visual Content Production With Adobe’s New AI Studio Features

Mireia Fernández

  • June 1, 2026
  • Updated: June 1, 2026 at 4:13 PM
Scaling Visual Content Production With Adobe’s New AI Studio Features

Content demand now changes faster than creative workflows. Gone are the days when marketing campaigns ran on one simple hero image. Nowadays, you’ll need paid media variations at the very least, along with social assets, visuals for landing pages, localized versions and fresh creativity for ongoing testing.

Adobe Stock Enter

Hiring more designers isn’t always an answer. Many teams are instead turning to Adobe Stock as a scalable foundation for content production. With AI Studio, Adobe Stock now goes beyond sourcing assets by letting teams edit and adapt stock content before licensing, making it easier to shape campaign-ready visuals within the same workflow. AI Studio is a way to transform stock content with AI-powered edits before licensing, while keeping creative control in the hands of the team.

According to research by Adobe, demand for content has grown dramatically. 96% of marketers surveyed have seen content demand double since 2022, and 71% expect it to increase fivefold in the next three years. Platform requirements, such as for Google responsive display ads -in which each campaign can require up to 15 images- only add to the burden.

If you’re in charge of a marketing team, you know about this too well: Visual content demand now moves faster than creative workflows can comfortably handle. That’s why many teams are building their workflows around Adobe Stock, with AI Studio helping them adapt, refine, and scale assets earlier in the process.

Why Manual Image Production Stops Working at Scale

Traditional workflows tend to repeat the same steps for every new asset you create, so team members enter a cycle of concept, design, review, revise and export. It’s not a problem when you have a limit on the number of assets to be delivered, but when each campaign and strategy has the potential to generate dozens of new requirements, things can very quickly get out of hand.

It isn’t the fault of your designers. The fault lies within the structure of the workflow, which is just too linear. This results in a time-consuming process that swells with every new iteration and review. Eventually you’ll have to make tradeoffs. 

The tradeoffs are usually that campaigns will have to launch later, and you’ll have to compromise on the volume of assets you can deliver. This is even more true if deadlines are tight, and the quality of the work can suffer as time budgets compress. The more those time budgets become squeezed, the harder it is to maintain brand consistency.

The issue is almost never creativity, it’s that linear manual image production can’t scale when content demand increases exponentially. And this is precisely where Adobe Stock changes the equation by removing the need to create every asset manually from the ground up.

Move from Isolated Creation to a Visual System

With Adobe Stock, designers don’t need to begin with a blank canvas. Thanks to their creative insights, teams typically already have selections of strong base assets that can be repurposed, then adapted for every channel, audience and format.

They might already choose licensable source imagery that suits the theme of the campaign, then create multiple assets from that seed image.

This is a move from one-off creation to visual assembly.

There are significant efficiencies to be gained here. 

  • The main benefit is you start with high-quality source assets instead of a blank canvas.
  • You can simply adapt the visuals according to your formats and placements. 
  • You can use AI to generate elements you can’t source, expand compositions, and build upon pre-approved creative materials.
  • You can reuse assets across multiple campaign materials and shape new variants faster in future campaigns.

Adobe Stock and shared libraries help teams scale output by handling all of the above. Instead of redesigning everything from scratch, teams can streamline and systematize their work—without ever leaving the tools they already use.

How Adobe Stock Turns Assets Into Campaign-Ready Content with AI Studio

Adobe Stock has evolved beyond a simple content library. Its AI-powered editing capabilities are built directly into the workflow, helping teams start with high-quality stock assets that they can instantly adapt, transform, and scale into campaign-ready visuals. Now you no longer need to find the “right” visual for your campaign. Instead, you can create the assets you envisioned for your product.

These capabilities aren’t standalone tools, but helpful aids to remove the most time-consuming parts of production workflows.

Here are the main AI-powered features that turn AI Studio into a production engine, not just a source of assets.

Type to Edit

Type to Edit lets you modify an image simply by using natural language. It’s as easy to use as describing the changes you need to apply to an image, such as removing objects, adjusting lighting, or altering composition. Thanks to it, creative teams have complete freedom to explore new ideas without having to deal with any technical complexity or time-consuming edits.

Change Color

Change Color is a useful feature that updates the entire color palette of an image using curated presets as well as custom HEX-code palettes. Thanks to AI, the image quality remains the same while applying a cohesive new color story.

This Stock feature is ideal for maintaining brand consistency and keeping your campaign aligned. Thanks to it, your teams are able to adapt visuals to match brand guidelines or create seasonal variations of the same asset in just a few seconds.

Change Mood

Change Mood applies curated emotional tones to all your assets in a few clicks. Just by adjusting the lighting or color of your images, Adobe Stock’s AI can add a serene, nostalgic, or dramatic mood to them. It can also adjust facial expressions with ease. This brings emotional clarity and also adds a layer of consistency to all your campaigns, as well as your storytelling goals.

Change Background

Change Background for enterprise users, uses AI to isolate subjects from an environment or even generate new locations for all your images. With it, anything in the background, or the backgrounds themselves, can be removed, replaced, or created using text prompts. Another useful feature is that if you found a background you liked in Stock’s library, you can add it to your new asset without the need for complex editing.

Expand Image

This feature lets you extend any photo or image while preserving its style and composition. This is very helpful when teams need to resize a picture without having to worry they will crop key elements out of the image. As a result, you no longer need to source different images for every format. With Expand Image, one asset will adapt to all your needs.

Bulk Edit

Adobe Stock’s Bulk Edit feature offers AI-powered transformations, such as background removal, resizing, color changes, styling, etc. across multiple images at once. This allows teams that have to deal with high volume production to scale output, while also maintaining consistency throughout all their campaigns.

Build Reusable Systems, Not More Isolated Files

The biggest benefit of using Adobe Stock with AI Studio occurs when teams stop thinking in terms of outputs and start thinking in terms of reusable materials

Strong visual systems can be created, with access to systemized key elements such as source imagery, graphic elements, templates, pre-approved type faces, and colors. Once those elements exist, and there’s a single point of access, then teams don’t need to go hunting for files or recreating treatments. Assets are no longer tied to a specific file, but can exist across multiple files at once. 

These libraries help bring those elements together. So if an image is selected from Adobe Stock, it can be saved to a collection and later refined, reused, amended, and so on, vastly reducing the need to duplicate labor and resources. Those changes update across many assets instantly. Compare that to manual file-by-file editing. 

Templates are another such element, allowing members of the team to access preconfigured layouts with adjustments according to occasion, safe in the knowledge that they remain consistent.

These are some practical ways to develop visual systems. They allow you to shift from delivering isolated controllables to a method of work that supports faster adaptation.

Why Structuring Makes More Sense

Scaling visual production isn’t about producing more from scratch nor hiring more designers to suit your project’s needs. It’s about working smarter. Adobe Stock and AI Studio give teams a flexible foundation to build, adapt, and scale content efficiently using the tools they already use. 

This approach works especially well in environments where one campaign idea needs to be adapted many times.

This isn’t confined to just teams of a certain size. Anyone can benefit, provided it is system based and has regular access to those source materials. If your team is constantly resizing, cropping, localizing, and reworking the same visual idea for different channels, then a scalable image workflow is likely a strong fit.

Teams need more than systemized workflows to clear the gap between ideas and the outputs that serve them. By doing more with existing resources, they can reduce the time taken to act on new ideas.

So start working smarter and explore Adobe Stock’s new AI-powered tools to produce more images with fewer resources today.

Mireia Fernández

Mireia Fernández is passionate about the world of video games and new technologies, a hobby that dates back to her childhood with the MSX HB 501p. Born and residing in Barcelona, Mireia has been working as an editor for over 10 years and specializes in writing reviews, tutorials, and software guides, as well as doing everything possible to publish news before anyone else. Her hobbies include spending hours playing on her console, walking her golden retriever, and keeping up with the latest SEO developments.

Editorial Guidelines