Along with the visual UI, you'll be able to create 3D animations by using your hands and phone or tablet to place objects in space, shape their paths and add triggers so viewers can interact with your objects," Adobe said. That'll make AR creation easier to, well, grasp, while helping creators deliver mobile experiences faster.

As it's part of the Creative Cloud, Aero will work with content creation apps like Photoshop and Dimension. Adobe is also trying to standardize interaction models and file formats, and is working with open standards efforts like usdf and GlTF, along with platforms and content creators including Pixar, Apple, Facebook and Microsoft.

Adobe has cited a few companies using the app to give an idea of what you can do with it. Mixed-media artist Gabe Barcia-Colombo used the app to create an update for his Descent AR experience that lets visitors peer inside the dreams of avatars created from scans of real people. Terminator: Dark Fate, meanwhile, lets you enter a 3D scene from the movie of the same name that's dropping this week.

Along with the app, Adobe has also launched the Adobe AR Residency program that will let artists create AR apps and give feedback to the product team in return. Adobe Aero is now available as a free iOS app for iPhone and iPad, though you'll likely have to pay for Adobe stock content, and you'll need to register to get an Adobe ID.