
The days of struggling with complex prompts to get an AI image that feels “right” are coming to an end. Google has announced a big update to the Gemini app, powered by its Personal Intelligence system. Gemini can now generate images that reflect your specific tastes, loved ones, and way of life without you having to upload them or write exhaustive descriptions. This is thanks to the integration of Nano Banana 2 with your own Google Photos library.
Gemini uses your Google Photos to deliver the image you want via Personal Intelligence
Previously, if you wanted an image of your “dream house,” you had to describe every architectural preference. Now, because Personal Intelligence understands your context from the Google apps you’ve linked, a simple Gemini AI prompt like “Design my dream house” is enough to get exactly the image you are imagining. The assistant automatically fills in the blanks based on your established preferences. This allows you to spend more time creating and less time explaining.
Perhaps the most impressive part of this rollout is how Gemini interacts with your Google Photos. If you use labels to organize pictures of yourself, your family, or even your pets, Gemini can now use those specific individuals as the “stars” of your generated images.
For example, you can ask Gemini to “create a charcoal sketch of me and my family at the beach.” For prompts like these, the chatbot will use your labeled photos to guide the process. You can experiment with various artistic styles—from oil paintings to claymation—without ever having to download and re-upload files.
Control and privacy
Google acknowledges that AI might not always choose the best reference photo the first time. To keep users in control, the app now includes a “Sources” button that reveals which image was selected to guide the creation. If you aren’t satisfied, you can simply tell Gemini what to fix or manually select a different photo using the “+” icon.
On the privacy side, Google remains firm: the Gemini app does not use your private Google Photos library to train its underlying models. The connection is entirely opt-in, and users can disconnect their apps at any time through the settings. For now, these features are rolling out to Google Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers in the U.S. There are plans to expand them to Chrome desktops and more regions in the near future.
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