I tried Adject today and was quite impressed.
I uploaded a simple product photo I had, and it produced professional-looking images with different backgrounds. What surprised me most was how natural the logo and shadows looked—AI usually fails in these areas.
It also has a video feature that creates short 5-second videos. It's ideal for Instagram stories, but there aren't many template options, so you have to experiment a bit yourself.
It's very easy to use; even someone like me who doesn't understand design could handle it comfortably. Since it works on a project basis, everything stays organized.
The downsides: The template library is currently empty, and you can't process 50 products at once. But it does the job well—it's fast, cheap, and effective.
I will definitely recommend it to my friends who do e-commerce in our entrepreneurship programs. It makes much more sense than renting a studio and paying a photographer.
Adject
👋 Hello Everyone!
We’ve built a lot of features in Adject to improve creative productivity, things like reference images, drag & drop uploads, prompt helpers, and structured projects. But we realized something: even that can feel like too many steps for some workflows.
With Adject for Chrome, you don’t need to upload anything at all. You can simply right-click any image on the web and send it directly to Adject as a product image or reference, straight into your project.
It’s a small change, but it removes friction completely, and makes collecting inspiration and starting production incredibly fast.
We’d love to hear what you think and what other small workflow improvements would make a big difference for you.
Adject
Hi PH! I’m Saljug, co-founder at Adject.
A big challenge in creative tools is context switching, jumping between tabs, folders, downloads, and uploads. It breaks flow.
The extension is about protecting that flow. You see an image you like, you right-click, and it’s already where you need it to be, inside your project.
I’d love to hear how others think about reducing friction in creative tools, especially for visual work.
Adject
Hey everyone, I’m Berke, working on the development side at Adject.
One thing we care a lot about is making tools feel invisible. The best workflows are the ones you barely notice.
The Chrome extension does almost nothing, and that’s intentional. It only acts when you right-click an image and send it to Adject. No tracking, no background activity, no clever hacks.
If you’re curious about how we think about lightweight integrations or clean extension design, happy to chat.
Adject
Hey PH, I’m Cenker, co-founder of Adject.
We started Adject after watching e-commerce teams struggle with the same thing over and over: great products, but painfully slow and expensive visual production. Photoshoots, mockups, freelancers, endless revisions.
The Chrome extension is a small but important step in our direction, removing friction wherever it exists. If inspiration is already on the web, you shouldn’t have to download files just to start creating.
Curious to hear where your creative workflows feel slow or annoying, we’re very focused on fixing those small but high-impact problems.
Adject
Hey PH, I’m Gadir. I work closely with e-commerce teams using Adject.
What we hear most often is: “It’s not the big features that slow us down, it’s the tiny steps repeated all day.”
This extension removes one of those steps. It’s especially useful when collecting references, competitor visuals, or inspiration during research.
If you’re building or marketing physical products, I’d love to know how you currently collect and manage visual assets.