Google Whisk was a Google Labs experiment for fast visual exploration. Instead of writing a long text prompt, Whisk let you upload images for the subject, scene, and style, then remix them into a new image. In 2026 the standalone Whisk experience was shut down: on April 30, its best capabilities moved into Google Flow, so the main link now points there.
What Google Whisk Could Do
- use images as prompts instead of long text prompts
- combine a subject, scene, and style into a new image
- use Gemini to describe uploaded images automatically
- send those descriptions to Imagen 3 for generation
- show and edit the underlying text prompts
- explore visual ideas quickly rather than perform pixel-perfect edits
What Changed
Google announced that Whisk would be discontinued as a standalone tool on April 30, 2026. Migration to Flow was opt-in, and media left in a Whisk library after that date was set to be permanently deleted. If you are looking for Whisk today, start with Google Flow.
Who It Is For
This page is useful if you remember Whisk by name and want to know where its features went. For similar workflows, explore AIDive categories for image generation, image to video, and video generation. Other visual ideation tools to compare include Dreamina, Midjourney, and Leonardo AI.


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