just alvin
March 19, 2026 04:39
Leonardo AI launches detailed guides to AI image editing featuring Nano Banana, GPT Image 1.5, and Flux models as competition from Adobe, Google, and Canva increases.
Leonardo AI has published an extensive analysis of AI image editing capabilities, positioning itself against Adobe, Google and Canva in an increasingly crowded market where the focus is shifting from pure creation to precision improvement.
The platform now offers six AI models for image editing, each optimized for a different workflow. Nano Banana handles quick editing and style transfer. Nano Banana Pro targets high-fidelity text and character consistency at higher computational costs. GPT Image 1.5 excels at iterative multi-rotation enhancements. ByteDance’s Seedream 4.5 specializes in fashion and textile rendering. Black Forest Labs’ Flux 2 Pro and FLUX.1 Kontext Max provide realistic skin textures and scene structures.
What the platform actually does
Practical applications are divided into six categories: Spatial editing includes generative outpainting to replace backgrounds, isolate subjects, and change aspect ratios. Commercial photography includes virtual try-on technology for garments and automatic shadow creation for product shots. Portrait photo editing includes adjusting facial expressions, retouching skin, and applying digital makeup.
Style transfer allows users to recolor images with different artistic aesthetics while maintaining their composition. Environmental changes deal with the transition from day to dusk and weather changes. The restoration tool recovers degraded historical photos and advanced low-resolution files.
Leonardo’s “Blueprints” system comes pre-packaged with these features for one-click execution. Changing backgrounds, transferring styles, and restoring old photos each bundle multiple AI tasks into a single workflow.
The competitive situation is important here
The timing is no coincidence. Adobe announced that AI Assistant for Photoshop entered public beta on March 10, adding interactive editing capabilities to the professional standard. On March 11, Canva launched Magic Layers, which splits flat images into editable primitives. Google began testing an inline markup tool for Gemini image editing on March 17th. This allows the user to circle the area while entering instructions.
The market has clearly moved beyond the “create image from text” phase and into an area where users want precise control over their output. Adobe still dominates professional workflows. Canva owns the accessibility category. Google’s Gemini and ChatGPT offer free tiers with daily limits.
What sets Leonardo apart appears to be the variety of models under one roof. Rather than building a single proprietary system, the platform integrates options from Google, OpenAI, ByteDance, and Black Forest Labs, allowing users to switch tools mid-project.
Understandable technological change
Traditional photo editing processes images into a grid of pixels. Removing people from a beach photo means manually copying the sand texture to cover them. AI editing interprets scenes semantically. This means it knows what the sand looks like and recreates it on the fly rather than trying to match the pattern elsewhere in the frame.
This explains why AI can persuasively change time. Instead of applying filters, the system recalculates shadows, color temperature, and atmospheric depth based on learned physics.
Free access is available through Leonardo’s daily token allowance, Gemini, and ChatGPT’s free tier. The Flux model is open ended. This means that anyone with sufficient GPU hardware can run it locally without any platform dependencies.
For specialized workflows that require consistent results across high asset volumes, a model-switching approach may prove more practical than committing to an ecosystem of single vendors. That is, the assumption is that the learning curve for managing the six AI characteristics will not impede efficiency gains.
Image source: Shutterstock
