Lighting is everything. It defines atmosphere, emotion, and focus — it’s what makes a portrait feel cinematic or a product shot look premium.
Traditionally, once a photo is taken, that light is locked in forever. But at this year’s Adobe MAX — the annual creativity conference where Adobe previews experimental tools and prototypes — the company unveiled a mind-bending experiment that changes that rule completely.
Meet Project Light Touch, a generative-AI-powered relighting tool that gives photographers and designers total control over illumination after capture. Using machine learning to infer depth, shadows, and materials within a flat 2D image, Light Touch lets you move, diffuse, and even recolor light sources as if you were adjusting them on set.
It’s the kind of control creatives have dreamed of for decades — and Adobe just turned it into reality. Watch below.
00:00 – Intro
00:29 — Turning on the impossible lamp
01:20 — Diffusing harsh sunlight in a portrait
02:30 — Spatial Lighting Mode
03:00 — The pumpkin test
04:17 — Creative play and color control
Light Touch continues Adobe’s broader move toward what you might call “3D intelligence in 2D workflows.” It sits in the same creative lineage as Project Turntable and Project Perfect Blend — experiments that let designers treat flat images as spatial environments. What’s striking here isn’t just the technical wizardry, but how natural it feels. The relit photos behave as if the AI truly understands form, material, and atmosphere. It’s a glimpse of how future versions of Photoshop or Lightroom might let artists shape light itself, not just edit pixels.
Project Light Touch may be the coolest Adobe Sneak yet — and perhaps the most meaningful one for photographers and designers. It hints at a future where AI understands light the way artists do. Under the hood, it likely generates a physics-based depth and material model for every pixel, allowing light to behave as it would in the real world.
It’s not a gimmick; it’s a paradigm shift. When creatives talk about wanting more control, this is exactly what they mean — the power to bend light itself long after the moment has passed.





