Google Lens' new search feature lets you find objects using a mix of text and images

Publish date: 2023-05-29

What you need to know

At its Search On event last year, Google teased a new Lens feature that would power your shopping experiences (opens in new tab) on the best Android phones (opens in new tab) and Chromebooks. The search giant is now rolling out that experience with a new smart feature called multisearch.

Google announced today that it's launching a new way to search on mobile devices. The new multisearch function in Lens allows you to do a quick search for objects using a combination of text and images at the same time.

It comes in handy when you don't "have all the words to describe what you were looking for," the search giant noted.

Google provided a couple of screenshots showing the feature in action. In one example, multisearch is used to refine a search for an orange dress by adding the query “green” to find it in another color.

You can also use the new functionality to snap a photo of a rosemary plant and append your query with “care instructions."

Google noted that multisearch helps you "go beyond the search box and ask questions about what you see." In other words, it helps you search for objects you find hard to describe.

The feature resides in the Google app for Android and iOS, though it's only available to beta testers in the U.S. for now. To get started, simply tap the Lens camera icon in the Google app and search for one of your screenshots or take a photo of an object. Then, you need to swipe up and tap the "+ Add to your search" button to modify your search with text queries.

"All this is made possible by our latest advancements in artificial intelligence, which is making it easier to understand the world around you in more natural and intuitive ways," Google said in a blog post. "We’re also exploring ways in which this feature might be enhanced by MUM– our latest AI model in Search– to improve results for all the questions you could imagine asking."

Google didn't say whether the feature is coming to the web. But it's a safe bet that it will, given Lens' availability on the web (opens in new tab) inside Google Photos (opens in new tab) and the launch of the Lens-powered reverse image search option (opens in new tab) on Chrome for desktop last year.

For the time being, the feature only applies to searches in English. The Mountain View-based company also noted that it returns "the best results for shopping searches," though it's also useful for other types of queries.

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