Google’s image generation tool, Whisk, is being prepared for new upgrades that extend beyond the already expected precise reference feature. Two additions are currently in testing. The first is a sharing option for “ingredients”, character, scene, style, and the original prompt. When a user shares a creation, the recipient would see these ingredients on the left with the generated output on the right. The key is that recipients can import those ingredients directly into Whisk, remix them, or re-prompt. This could transform Whisk into a collaborative tool where meme templates, stylistic presets, or custom character-scene combinations circulate between users.

The second feature is a “Print order” button inside the library tab. This mirrors Google Photos’ photobook service. It would allow users to turn Whisk outputs into printed albums. The idea targets people experimenting with personal portraits, style transfers, or thematic remixes, enabling them to compile images into physical collections.
These updates show Google aligning Whisk with two broader strategies: integrating practical output pipelines (from digital to print, similar to Photos) and strengthening sharing mechanics that support virality and community use. For creative users, it reduces friction between experimentation, collaboration, and tangible results. The rollout timing remains unclear, but precise reference is likely to arrive first, with ingredient sharing and book ordering positioned as follow-ups discovered in current builds.