- By Prateek Levi
- Sun, 30 Nov 2025 05:59 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
Google just rolled out powerful image models like Gemini 3 Pro and Nano Banana Pro, and a fresh leak suggests the company is smoothing the creative workflow even further: an in-app annotation tool that would let users draw and add text directly onto AI-generated images before downloading them. This was flagged by leaker TestingCatalog on X.
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What the leak shows
Screenshots shared by the tipster show a simple set of markup controls — a draw tool and a “T” text tool — inside Gemini’s image UI. That implies you could circle a subject, scribble camera directions, or drop quick labels right onto an image you just generated. Multiple outlets that picked up the leak describe the same controls and note the leak appears targeted at the web version of Gemini.
Why this matters to creators
On paper it’s a small UX tweak. In practice, it closes a friction point: creators currently generate an image, export it, open a separate editor to add notes or markers, then feed the annotated image back into a pipeline (for example, into video-generation workflows like Veo 3.1). If annotation lands inside Gemini, that loop becomes one click shorter — faster iterations, clearer visual prompts, and fewer miscommunications between text prompts and visual intent.
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How it could change prompt workflows
Think beyond sticky notes. Instead of typing “put a cat on the left and a dog on the right,” you could sketch anchors on the left and right, label them, then tell Gemini to “replace left anchor with cat” — a hybrid visual + text instruction that’s more intuitive and less error-prone. For advanced users, this means tighter control when crafting sequences of edits or describing camera angles and zooms for downstream video tools.
Caveats and the current state
This is a leak, not a launch. Google’s Nano Banana Pro — the pro-tier image model in Gemini — was released recently and already focuses on precise editing and better text rendering, but there’s no official rollout timeline for the annotation tool yet. Expect testing first on web builds and gradual rollouts if everything looks stable.
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Bottom line
Annotating inside Gemini would be a modest feature with outsized practical value: it streamlines a common creative pain point, helps users iterate visually, and pairs naturally with the high-fidelity editing that Nano Banana Pro already offers. If the leak proves accurate, creatives will get a smarter canvas — not just a prettier image generator.


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