Magic eraser website

  1. Google Magic Eraser cleans up your messy photo mistakes, and that's a bad thing
  2. How to Remove a Person from a Photo in Seconds
  3. Google’s new Magic Editor tool promises AI
  4. How to Use Google’s Magic Eraser on Android and iPhone


Download: Magic eraser website
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Google Magic Eraser cleans up your messy photo mistakes, and that's a bad thing

Ever since my Google Pixel 3a, I’ve consistently been impressed with the cameras on board Google's handsets, specifically the quality that can be squeezed out of historically modest hardware via intelligent image processing and AI-powered edits. And one of the most impressive tools to grace Google’s camera app is the Magic Eraser. Magic Eraser was launched with the Google Pixel 6 , and consequently rolled out to earlier models via a software update, The AI-powered Content-Aware Fill tool allows you to remove unwanted background objects automatically using subject detection, or manually by painting over them, plus a recent update to the tool added a subtler Camouflage mode that blends rather than erases. It’s Photoshop-style edits, on a phone. I primarily use my camera phone to document everyday life; portraits of my children, a snap of a vista while out on a walk, but definitely no food photos. Magic Eraser allows me to clean up those photos and make them perfect – or at least passable. But is that a good thing? Most authentic moments happen in a flash, when you don’t have the luxury of composing the shot perfectly, shifting your angle so the background looks better, or getting that second chance to catch the moment. And even given those luxuries, photo failures can happen, even to the best photographers. So surely Magic Eraser is a good thing? Don’t get me wrong – I want to make authentic pictures that also catch the eye, especially lovely portraits of my kids. I often ad...

How to Remove a Person from a Photo in Seconds

After tons of attempts, you finally snap the perfect photo of your family on vacation—only to have it ruined by a person walking into the frame at the last second. We’ve all been there at some point. From photobombers to crowds of tourists, there are plenty of scenarios where an unwanted person can ruin an otherwise awesome photograph. Fortunately, there’s an easy way to remove a person from an image in just a few seconds. All you need is an AI-powered photo editor like So, are you hoping to delete a photobomber from your photo or erase an ex from your “cheese!”‍ Why You Might Need to Remove a Person from Your Photo‍ There are tons of reasons you might want to remove unwanted people from your photos. This is true whether they’re an intentional photobomber, an unwitting group of strangers, or just someone who you wish wasn’t part of a particular photo. Additionally, the ability to erase people from images gives you a ton of creative control and more options when it comes to choosing which pictures to share on social media. With modern editing tools, it’s so easy to remove a person from a photo that anyone can do it in just a few seconds. (Yes, even beginners with no editing experience!) Let’s explore how you can easily remove a person from your photos (and why you might want to) in various real-life scenarios. Scenario #1: Removing a Photobomber‍ We’ve all been in a situation where our photos don’t turn out exactly how we’d hoped. Arguably the worst case of this is when you...

Google’s new Magic Editor tool promises AI

Google teased its new AI-enhanced editing tool at this year's I/O conference. The Magic Editor uses generative AI to do things like expand a composition (as seen above) or rescale a subject in a scene. Google In addition to Of course, AI-powered image editing is nothing new for Google. Handy tools like the Magic Eraser, for removing unwanted distractions, and Photo Unblur, for enhancing soft/blurred shots, have been around for several years. And Google has been leveraging AI to help organize and surface images in users’ libraries since 2015. What can Google’s Magic Editor do? But the Magic Editor takes AI-enhanced manipulation a leap further. Not only can users select and edit subjects (similar to using a mask in Lightroom/Capture One) but with a few taps of the screen you can easily scale and reposition subjects in the frame. The image on the left is the original shot, while the image on the left has been manipulated using a beta version of the Magic Editor tool to remove background subjects, rescale and move the subject in the frame, and remove the subject's camera strap. Google In the example with the balloons, for instance, the portion of the bench created using generative AI shows a noticeable red tint. Similarly, in the waterfall demo, the area under the subject’s arm shows an obvious repeating pattern in the rocks. These criticisms aside, the power of this tool to dramatically reshape image editing on the fly can’t be understated. And surely improvements will be mad...

How to Use Google’s Magic Eraser on Android and iPhone

Joe Fedewa Staff Writer Joe Fedewa is a Staff Writer at How-To Geek. He has been covering consumer technology for over a decade and previously worked as Managing Editor at XDA-Developers. Joe loves all things technology and is also an avid DIYer at heart. He has written thousands of articles, hundreds of tutorials, and dozens of reviews. Chris Hoffman Editor-in-Chief Chris Hoffman is Editor-in-Chief of How-To Geek. He's written about technology for over a decade and was a PCWorld columnist for two years. Chris has written for The New York Times and Reader's Digest, been interviewed as a technology expert on TV stations like Miami's NBC 6, and had his work covered by news outlets like the BBC. Since 2011, Chris has written over 2,000 articles that have been read more than one billion times---and that's just here at How-To Geek. Open a photo in the Google Photos app and tap the "Edit" button. Select "Tools" and tap "Magic Eraser." You need a Google Pixel phone or a Google One subscription to use Magic Eraser. One of Google’s most touted Pixel features is called “Magic Eraser.” It allows you to select objects in photos and “magically” remove them. This handy feature is available to all Joe Fedewa Joe Fedewa is a Staff Writer at How-To Geek. He has been covering consumer technology for over a decade and previously worked as Managing Editor at XDA-Developers. Joe loves all things technology and is also an avid DIYer at heart. He has written thousands of articles, hundreds of t...