With iOS 18.2 and iPadOS 18.2, Apple is adding support for three Apple Intelligence image generation features, including Image Playground, Genmoji, and Image Wand. Image Wand lets you create visual aids for your notes on iPhone and iPad.
Image Wand is an offshoot of Image Playground, and it seems to use the same general image generation engine. As with Image Playground, you can use a text description and Apple Intelligence will whip up an image for you, but you can also use your own rough drawings as a base.
Image Playground and Genmoji don't support sketches as an inspiration for images generated by Apple Intelligence, so that's the unique feature that you get with Image Wand.
Apple designed Image Wand for the Notes app, and that's where it is available. Most of Apple's highlighting of the feature has been for the iPad version of Image Wand, but it does work in the Notes app on iPhone as well.
Image Wand is only in the Notes app at the current time, but Apple might bring it to other apps like Freeform in the future.
The neat thing about Image Wand is that it can use the information that you've written in the Notes app to give you a contextually relevant generated image.
Once you've written something, either typed or handwritten with the Apple Pencil on the iPad, tap into the Markup menu to get to the Image Wand tool. The icon looks a bit like a magician's wand with a multi-colored tip.
You can swipe through the different image options to find the most relevant image. For the phrases that are automatically pulled in, you can tap on the "-" to remove something, or you can add context by typing something in the text bar. You can also tap on the " " button to select additional phrases pulled from your notes. When you're finished, tap on "Done" to add it to your note.
If you have an Apple Pencil with an iPad, you can handwrite your notes and have Image Wand generate an image based on your handwritten text. This is a useful feature for actual note taking in a class, and it works the same way as generating an image from typed text.
Rather than generating an image solely from text, you can make a sketch that Image Wand can use when creating a picture. On the iPhone, you'll need to use the Markup tools to draw an image with a finger, but on the iPad, you can use the Apple Pencil.
In some cases, it will also use the same colors that you've chosen.
After you've created an image with Image Wand and pressed the "Done" button, the image you've created can be moved around, resized, deleted, or copied.
There is one particularly useful feature available after an image has been created, and that's the remove background option. If you tap on the icon with the three dots and then choose Remove Background, it will tweak your image to remove color that might be in the background so that it better blends in with your note.
There are three styles available in Image Wand: Sketch, Illustration, and Animation.
Apple describes Sketch as a "highly detailed and academic" style that "produces gorgeous drawings on stark backgrounds," while the illustration style features strong outlines, bold colors, and simple shapes. Apple says the animation style has a "whimsical, 3D cartoon look."
Animation, illustration, and sketchImage Wand has a unique limitation compared to Genmoji and Image Playground - it won't generate people. If you try to generate an image that has a person, even one that's generic, it will let you know that images involving people are not supported.
Image Wand will be available on devices that support Apple Intelligence. That includes the iPhone 15 Pro, the iPhone 15 Pro Max, all iPhone 16 models, the iPad mini with A17 Pro chip, and all iPads with an Apple silicon chip.
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