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Jean-Christo203's avatar
Jean-Christo203
Community Member
18 days ago

Using multiple AI images from Articulate to generate a composition

Greetings,

as much as I don't want to reignite a debate over AI usage and such, I would like to suggest the following idea:

Generating AI images... using Storyline's own AI-generated images

I don't know if files, generated with Storyline's own system have a specific code attached to it, but it would be nice to, say, merge two images together.

For example...

  1. First, I generate the image of the interior of a restaurant.
  2. Then, I generate the image of a waitress.
  3. Finally, I generate another image, with the waitress inserted in the restaurant, using the previous two images I've generated, likely keeping any artistic features I've prompted.

It would be like "first creating the puzzle pieces" and then "assembling them".

Now, I wish to be limited to "only imnages generated by Articulate", because licenses and copyrights can be a HUGE problem if anyone can take random pictures from the internet, merge them together and call them their own. That's why I asked if AI-generated images have specific coding behind it to mark them as "Articulate assets".

Thanks in advance :)

1 Reply

  • Hi Jean-Christo203,

    Thanks for sharing this idea, and for laying out the use case so clearly.

    At the moment, Storyline’s AI image generator can only create images from text prompts, it doesn’t support using previously generated AI images as inputs or combining multiple images into a new composition. There also isn’t a way today to tag or reuse AI-generated images as source assets within the generator.

    That said, the workflow you’re describing, creating individual elements first and then assembling them into a cohesive scene, is a really thoughtful use case. We especially appreciate you calling out the licensing and copyright considerations and the idea of limiting inputs to Articulate-generated images only.

    I’ve shared this request with our product team so they can see how authors are thinking about more advanced AI image workflows.