Google Images’ 25th anniversary major redesign: build an inspiration wall modeled after Pinterest and introduce Nano Banana for instant AI generation

Google Images is celebrating its 25th anniversary and rolling out its biggest redesign since launch: it will take inspiration from Pinterest to create an endless-scroll “For You” inspiration wall and a collections feature. At the same time, it embeds the Nano Banana image-generation model directly into AI Overviews, enabling users to generate customized images within the search page.
(Background: Google has launched Nano Banana 2 Lite! 4-second image generation, at just $0.034 per thousand images—aiming to capture the enterprise automated AI imaging market)
(Additional context: Pinterest’s new “Ask Pinterest” AI shopping app—aiming to break through with aesthetic taste)

In theory, the search engine’s duty is to help users find answers as quickly as possible, then leave. But on the day Google Images hits 25, it’s decided on a new direction: it doesn’t want you to go. This redesign of Google’s image search interface changes the original three-step flow—“enter keywords, find images, close the tab”—into an inspiration wall you can scroll down endlessly.

The interface logic is very similar to Pinterest. At the same time, Google also plugs its AI image-generation feature directly into search results, so users don’t have to jump out of the Google ecosystem to turn the scenes in their head into images.

From the search results page, it becomes an inspiration wall you can’t scroll past

After users open the redesigned Google Images, they’ll first see a “For You” image wall customized based on personal interests and browsing history. Google says the wall will update in real time, and the design logic is meant to keep users continuously scrolling—rather than finding one image and then closing the tab.

While browsing, users can save the images they like into “collections,” and arrange them above the image wall using page-style tags, making it easy to revisit later. For example, users can create collections such as “travel outfit inspiration” and “reading nook setup,” turning scattered images from everywhere into separate lists of inspiration they can return to.

This redesign will roll out in the coming weeks, first for the U.S. desktop version with an English interface, and it requires signing in to a Google account to use. Google is currently still testing on a limited basis, but its ambition is already unmistakably clear: turn Google Images from a “search tool” into a place you can “browse.”

Why learn from Pinterest?

Go a layer deeper, and this is a battle over users’ time. Pinterest’s success over the past decade or more proves that a “browsing-style” interface can keep users engaged for half an hour—far more sticky than traditional search pages where the experience is “search and leave.” Google Images borrows this logic, effectively giving the ad business an additional reservoir: the longer users stay on the Google platform, the more ad impressions and click opportunities there naturally are.

The other half of the calculation is hidden in the image-generation feature. This time, Google places its image-generation capability directly into AI Overviews. In simple terms, the AI-generated summary section at the very top of search results now gains a new ability: turn a text description directly into an image—using the latest Nano Banana image-generation model, part of the Gemini image family.

The official explanation is that this is to help users when they can’t find the image they want on the internet, or when they want to visualize an idea in a more specific way—for instance, imagining what it would look like if a room were painted red, or how a seaside-style dorm should be arranged. In the coming weeks, this feature will launch in all regions that support AI Mode image generation, in English.

The real purpose of this step is defense. When users want to generate images, Google is betting they will stay within its own ecosystem to complete it—rather than opening another tab and asking ChatGPT.

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