On Thursday 26th October Hampton Primary School in Melbourne hosted an Big Day In Junior.
The Adobe Computer Society, Latrobe University, RMIT, MindFlight, National Australian Bank, Solar Buddies, The Australia Signals Directorate and Adobe were all involved running sessions for Year 5 & 6 students at Hampton and Elsternwick Primary Schools.
The Adobe sessions involved working with Adobe Premiere Rush on the students iPads to film, edit and share a story about what the they love the most in the whole wide world.
We focused on the key skills of Problem Solving, Collaboration and Creativity.
The students worked in pairs to film themselves with the Premiere Rush camera sharing what they love most.
Following some instructions, the students put together their stories with titles and audio assets.
For most of the students, this was an introduction to Premiere Rush and for many of the an introduction to Adobe. Many of the Year 6 students were very excited to hear that they would be getting access to the full Adobe Creative Cloud if they attend a government school in Year 7.
The annual Adobe Max conference is world’s largest digital creativity event. This year it involved about ten thousand creatives (in-person) in Los Angeles and hundreds and thousands watching the live and on-demand stream around the planet.
Keynote & demo highlights
Shantanu Narayen
In his opening keynote address, Adobe’s CEO, Chairman and Present Shantanu Narayen spoke about how creativity fuels the digital economy. He said,
Our lives are becoming increasingly digital and we are turning to creative differentiation to help us stand out as well as make choices. People are creating more than ever before, flooding every surface, every channel and every medium with their creativity … Digital is transforming every aspect of our lives and how we engage with the world’s information. Artificial Intelligence is accelerating this shift and offers the promise and potential to make us even more creative, even more productive and more successful.
Artificial intelligence, with a focus on Adobe Firefly, was a key theme of Max 2023. Narayen announced that since Firefly was launched 6 months ago, users have generated over 3 billion images. The new Adobe Express was also spotlighted among a record number of new products that have been launched this year by Adobe.
Narayen shared Adobe’s mission, to change the world through personalised digital experiences. He said,
We want to empower everyone anywhere to imagine, create and deliver the best digital experiences … Whether you are a creative pro or a beginner, we’re focused on giving you new playgrounds for exploration as well as ideation. We want to help you harness Adobe magic as this creative co-pilot to unlock new forms of artistry.
In relation to AI, Narayen said that he firmly believes that it will never replace human ingenuity.
Watch the full address here …
Shantanu Narayen’s opening keynote
Following Narayen’s address, there was a video that showed Photoshop artists from around the world (including Australia) discover Firefly’s new generative fill tool in Photoshop for the first time. Check it out …
David Wadhwani
David Wadhwani
David Wadhwani, Adobe’s President of the Digital Media business emphasied four key aspects of Adobe Firefly:
Deeply integrated into our tools
Designed to be commercially safe
Transparent with training data
Support for Content Credentials
He highlighted the importance of the Content Authenticity Initiative which now has almost 2000 members and he said that Firefly, thanks to its seamless integration with Photoshop, Illustrator, and Adobe Express, stands as the most rapidly embraced innovation Adobe has introduced to its suite of tools.
Watch David Wadhwani’s full address here …
Ashley Still
Ashley Still took to the stage and said that Adobe believes that creativity is a uniquely human trait and that AI is a tool for creatives to use to help enhance their work. She said that;
With Firefly at the core of Creative Cloud, you can streamline tasks and break the boundaries of your imagination across every creative medium.
Digital artist Anna McNaught did an amazing demo on Firefly integration with Photoshop. Watch it here …
Ashley Still highlighted the many new features to Photoshop that were added in 2023.
She also highlighted the recent launch of Photoshop on the Web (which also features Firefly tools such as generative fill and generative expand) and she shared a clip that outlines what is new in Lightroom.
Danielle Morimoto provided a demo on the latest features that are coming to Adobe Illustrator. Have a look at her demo …
Dacia Saenz shared some of the latest features of Premiere Pro such as enhanced speech and text based editing. Check them out …
Scott Belsky (Adobe’s EVP for Design & Emerging Products) then hosted a segment on the new re-imagined Adobe Express.
Paul Trani demonstrated the new integration features between Adobe Express, Photoshop & Illustrator. Here is that demo …
Katrina Torrijos (Adobe Express Evangelist) demonstrated the social media sharing side of Adobe Express …
Katrina also demonstrated the new Text to Template feature …
Adobe Sneaks
Danielle Morimoto with celebrity guest Adam Devine hosted this year’s Adobe Sneaks which is all about showcase new technologies that Adobe engineers are working on that may or may not end up as a future product or product feature.
Project Fast Fill
Gabriel Huang
Project Draw and Delight
Souymodip Chakraborty
Project Neo Sneak
Inigo Quilez Les
Project Scene Change
Zhan Xu
Project Primrose
Christine Dierk
Project Glyph Ease
Difan Liu
Project Poseable
Yi Zhou
Project Res Up
Yang Zhou
Project Dub Dub Dub
Zeyu Jin
Project See Though
Eric Kee
Project Stardust
Aya Philémon
Here are some of my favourite non-keynote Max Sessions so far …
Rebecca Hare – Three Simple Teaching Shifts That Unlock Student Creativity – VS202
With the avalanche of new challenges, new technologies, and new ways of communicating, we all need creative skills to thrive amid change. How can we best prepare our students for their future? Join Rebecca Hare, education community manager at Adobe, as she addresses the changing landscape and offers three techniques to unlock student creativity.
In this session, you’ll:
Reframe what matters when creating
Support your students’ unique vision and voice
Help them reflect on their journey of growth
Creating the Future, Drawing from the Past – VS818
This session features two artists who draw from a deep well of cultural heritage to celebrate the adaptability and resilience of the human spirit in creating art that bridges the digital divide.
Sougwen Chung, Canadian-born, Chinese-raised artist known for innovative and interdisciplinary work that explores the interaction between humans, technology, and art. Sougwen developed the use of robots as nonhuman collaborators to create mesmerizing and intricate visual compositions.
Dylan Mooney is a proud Yuwi, Torres Strait, and South Sea Islander artist from North Queensland. Working across painting, printmaking, digital illustration, and drawing, he vividly brings to life the rich cultural tapestry of his heritage, deeply influenced by history, culture, and family. Despite being legally blind, Dylan’s mastery of digital media allows him to create high-impact illustrations teeming with bright, saturated colors that express his political energy and keen insights.
On Wednesday 11th October I had the pleasure to be invited to Fitzroy High Schoolin Melbourne for an Adobe Day. Throughout the day I worked with all the Year 7 & 8 students and introduced them to Adobe Character Animator and Premiere Rush.
The Victorian Department of Education and Training (Vic DET) provides Adobe Creative Cloud applications to all of their secondary students and teachers. This means that individual schools don’t have to worry about finding the budget to provide this vital creativity software. The same centeralised distribution management is found in the New South Wales Department of Education (NSW DoE). Both Vic DET & NSW DoE are listed in the worlds largest K-12 education systems so having this sort of access to the world’s best digital creativity software is a wonderful benefit for all their students and teachers.
In a video interview with Allan Barnes from Fitzroy High School he said,
It’s great that the Department of Education have partnered with Adobe to make these product free for students. They just use their school email address and they can download all the apps and learn to use them while they are at school and then use them at TAFE or university or when they get a job.
I would like to thank Allan for organising this event.