Let's talk about the elephant in the room.
Actually, let's remove the elephant in the room using Generative Fill and Photoshop on the web.
I'll start by clicking on the generative area of the toolbar then on Generative Fill.
In the mode drop-down, I'll choose the lasso tool and begin selecting the elephant.
Notice that I'm drawing my selection loosely around the object making sure to leave a bit of room around the edges.
I don't need to worry about the elephant's shadow.
Photoshop is gonna take care of that for me.
When the selection is complete, a number of options appear in the contextual taskbar below the image.
If you've hidden the taskbar in the past you can bring it back by selecting View, then Contextual Taskbar here in the application menu.
In the model drop-down, I can experiment with a range of models both from Adobe and Adobe's AI partners.
In the text field to the right, I can type a description to give Photoshop a better sense of what I want to see, or just leave the text field empty to fill based on the existing image.
The more actions menu to the far right allows me to learn more about the feature or manage my generative credits.
With that set pressing fill will kick off the process.
After a few moments, the elephant is gone, and I'm presented with two more variations that I can cycle between to choose my favorite, or I can click the plus button to generate more based on my current settings.
And just like that, I've removed an object using generative fill.
I encourage you to give it a try
