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Canva goes all in on AI with its new Magic Studio tools

The mega design company is launching a new suite of AI features that automate many design tasks.

Canva goes all in on AI with its new Magic Studio tools
[Source photo: Canva]

There’s a lot of “magic” going on at Canva right now. And by that, we’re not referring to Canva’s 150 million monthly active users—currently generating $1.7 billion dollars annually for the company—through an app that makes it easy to design good-looking Instagram posts, decks, videos, and T-shirts.

By “magic,” we’re referring to the new Magic Studio—a mix of new and more formalized AI products that let you create digital content at will, transforming social posts into slides, into videos, into blogs, without a second thought. Now, a year after being first out of the gate with experimental generative AI tools, the company is doubling down on integrating assistive AI into the core experience of using Canva.

“People don’t wake up in the morning wanting to use AI. They wake up with a job to be done,” says Canva cofounder and COO Cliff Obrecht. “We want the AI tools we’re building to be workhorses, not gimmicks, seamlessly updated to help that output and help people work.”

The centerpiece of Magic Studio is a tool called Magic Design. Magic Design is basically a prompt. Its top search bar looks like a more colorful Google, where you can type “create a slide deck for a taco truck” or “build a video for Earth Day.” Canva then pulls from its library of stock imagery and leverage writing AI to create options instantly, which are populated into a tile grid. While the results are not perfect out of the gate—copywriting in particular is likely to be a bit generic—all elements of these templates are editable with a tap.

Furthermore, if you have brand guidelines to consider, Canva can automatically apply color and typography rules to your generated designs. And if you have image assets or copy you’d like worked in, you can upload those to be used in a video, too.

As Obrecht puts it, the platform is going for “maximum approachability and integrated functionality.”

YES, THERE’S A *LOT* OF MAGIC GOING ON

That’s all pretty handy, but Magic Studio’s real achievement is its ability to transform whatever media you make into another piece of media. A presentation can become a video, and a video can become a blog post, more or less instantly.

This approach is at least a little radical when it comes to multimedia creation. For the last few decades of digital production, media editing has been anchored to the media itself; photo editing has traditionally been a different discipline than video editing, for instance. You might hire two completely different people for jobs with some overlap—one person is a master in Photoshop and the other in Premiere. But why can’t I turn a slide deck into a video slideshow? Aren’t they both just imagery and words cropped a little differently?

A new plug-in called Magic Switch does exactly that. As the entire notion of media continues to converge, Canva is blurring the bounds of the design tool itself to adapt, rearranging your visual puzzle pieces to fit into a new context. Magic Switch looks particularly powerful for document-adjacent products, like presentations and posters. With a button press, you can reformat your paragraphs of prose into a bulleted summary, or to a blog post written in another language, or to a song lyric. This is the sort of large language model (LLM) functionality you know from ChatGPT that AI can do pretty well. But Canva integrates it right into your asset editing workflow.

Along the same lines, image- and video-editing is getting a boost from AI, too. Magic Grab automatically turns images into layers, meaning you can drag elements you don’t want right out of the frame. Magic Expands allows outpainting (where AI can expand your image to fill a larger frame). Magic Animate will add movement to elements inside a video or presentation. And Magic Morph will let you customize the look of your text or simple icons through a prompt—so if you want to cover your words with slime, this is the tool for you.

Finally, if you want to fully generate images or motion video from scratch, Canva has integrated OpenAI’s Dall-E and Google’s Imagen into a corner of the app called Magic Media. (And for any brands worried about the liability of using AI-generated imagery, they can simply opt out of using these tools in enterprise settings.)

CANVA’S PLAN TO PAY CREATORS

Users who want to use most of these AI features will have to pay, though nothing more than a typical Canva subscription (Canva Pro starts at $15/month for individuals, while Canva team plans start at $30/month for up to five people). When I ask Obrecht how Canva can offer a relatively unlimited stream of AI generation for a price on par with what Dall-E or Midjourney will charge, he mostly shrugs off the question.

“I think the costs of serving AI are exaggerated. We’ve already seen the costs come down tenfold in the last year,” he says. “It’s expensive to train models. But it’s relative to scale. So, at our scale, we’re training large models, but it’s part of our development costs. If you put 100 engineers on something, it’s expensive. If you train a model, it’s also expensive.”

As for who trains the model, that’s Canva. But it’s also Canva’s artists whose assets and templates have taught the AI. “As a creator, I’d be anxious, how is AI going to disrupt my revenue streams,” says Obrecht. “They’re responsible for creating a lot of the base assets these models are created on, and we feel creators should be paid for that work.”

So, much like Adobe, Canva is promising to pay its creators a licensing fee for training its AI. Adobe has promised an unspecified one-time payment to its stock photographers later this year, while Canva has announced a $200 million fund to pay its entire pool of creators over the next three years, which includes money earmarked for artists who opt in to train the AI. These artist are already paid to supply stock media and templates used by Canva’s customers. While Canva isn’t sharing specific payout amounts, a spokesperson did clarify that these artists should make more contributing to the AI program than they are currently.

The truth is that this is an uncomfortable, and likely unfair, time for most artists, who have had their work integrated into AI models—something I say as a human who has written 14,000-plus articles over his career that are likely hiding inside these machines. But I also can’t deny the utility that will be born from this sacrifice for creators today. Canva Magic Studio makes the task of creating presentations every bit as mindless as we have always wished them to be. There’s no need to subject the next generation of designers and marketers to punishingly dull work.

All in all, it’s a setup that has Canva feeling bullish on investing only more into AI tools into the future.

“While we’re maybe not as flashy around our AI products, we’re trying to build workhorses people actually use,” says Obrecht. “And we think having them front and center, tested and more confident—that will accelerate [things] exponentially.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mark Wilson is a senior writer at Fast Company who has written about design, technology, and culture for almost 15 years. His work has appeared at Gizmodo, Kotaku, PopMech, PopSci, Esquire, American Photo and Lucky Peach. More

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