DALL-E can now use AI to extend images as a human artist might

Since it was announced in April, the text-to-image AI tool DALL-E 2 has been wowing artists, researchers, and media types its high-quality images. Now, four months later, developer OpenAI is giving DALL-E 2 a new trick: the ability to extend the original images it creates beyond their original borders in logical and creative ways.

The new feature, which OpenAI calls “outpainting,” could be useful to graphic designers who need to create multiple sizes and shapes of a particular image to present in different contexts. A movie promo image, for instance, might require a perfectly square shape in one context, and a tall rectangular shape in another. For the latter, new art is required to fill in the extra space.

The artist Paul Trillo used outpaintinig to extend this image of a UFO downward to include the pool. Click to expand [Image: courtesy of OpenAI]
DALL-E 2 creates original 1024 X 1024-pixel images based on a keyword descriptions entered by the user. It can also make images based on objects and styles it sees in other images. For example, it might be given a street art image of a mouse alongside an art deco version, then combine elements of the two styles into an original picture of the rodent. It also has editing capabilities, meaning a user can erase a section of a generated image and then tell DALL-E to add a specific object or style in that area. For instance, if designer doesn’t like the expressionist red roses in the foreground of an image, they can erase them and ask DALL-E to put photorealistic white orchids there instead.

Now, the editing interface is getting some new buttons to control the expansion of images. In a demo Tuesday, I watched OpenAI engineer David Schnurr extend an image DALL-E had created earlier based on the keywords “two teddy bears mixing sparkling chemicals inside of a laboratory.” I saw a kind of steampunk-style image of two cute teddy bears wearing goggles standing at a lab table in the foreground. Schnurr wanted to extend the image to show more area above the teddy bears. So, he positioned the bottom half of a blue square over the top left section of image, which told the AI to use the storybook laboratory context and vibe in the lower half of the square as the basis for the extension of the image into the top half of the square.

“We’re adding more sort of laboratory concepts into the image, and then we can also expand upwards and really just make an image that’s as big as we would like,” Schnurr says. 

Say Schnurr had wanted DALL-E to include something specific in the extended area of the image, like a Cuckoo clock hanging on the wall above the bears. He could have done that by giving DALL-E some additional keywords.

Actually, Schnurr tells me, DALL-E creates four different versions of the extended area, from which the user can choose. If they don’t like any of the four they can try the extension function again, perhaps with different keywords.

DALL-E product manager Joanne Jang says the new feature was driven directly by feedback from DALL-E users. Filmmakers are using DALL-E to cut storyboarding time in half, Jang says. They might want to experiment with closer or wider shots during the creative process. Game designers have been using DALL-E to reduce the time it normally takes to create new scenes and actions with concept artists.

The outpainting feature isn’t a free add-on. Every DALL-E beta user gets 50 free credits during their first month of use, and 15 free credits every subsequent month. Every time a user generates an additional section of an image it costs them a credit. Users can purchase additional credits in 115-generation packs for $15, OpenAI says.

Jang says more than a million users have been invited into the DALL-E beta program, including more than 3,000 working artists. As a result, OpenAI has been fielding a lot of different kinds of feedback on how to improve the DALL-E’s tools.

But one ask seemed to cut across user types, Jang adds: “I think amongst all those feedback points, one thing that was pretty commonly requested was a flexibility in aspect ratios,” she says.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90783798/dall-e-image-generator-now-goes-beyond-the-frame?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 3y | 31 ago 2022, 17:21:18


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Plane yoga is going viral on EasyJet and Spirit Airlines

The last place you’d think of doing a downward dog? An airplane.

That might soon change, as plane yoga is apparently now a thing.

6 lug 2025, 12:20:03 | Fast company - tech
How AI is transforming corporate finance

The role of the CFO is evolving—and fast. In today’s volatile business environment, finance leaders are navigating everything from unpredictable tariffs to tightening regulations and rising geopol

5 lug 2025, 13:10:03 | Fast company - tech
Want to move data between Apple and Google Maps? Try this  workaround

In June, Google released its newest smartphone operating system, Android 16. The same month, Apple previewed its next smartphone oper

5 lug 2025, 10:40:07 | Fast company - tech
Tally lets you design great free surveys in 60 seconds

This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. 

4 lug 2025, 13:50:03 | Fast company - tech
How China is leading the humanoid robots race

I’ve worked at the bleeding edge of robotics innovation in the United States for almost my entire professional life. Never before have I seen another country advance so quickly.

In

4 lug 2025, 09:20:03 | Fast company - tech
‘There is nothing that Aquaphor will not fix’: The internet is in love with this no-frills skin ointment

Aquaphor has become this summer’s hottest accessory.

The no-frills beauty staple—once relegated to the bottom of your bag, the glove box, or a bedside drawer—is now dangling from

3 lug 2025, 23:50:07 | Fast company - tech