- Camera Intelligence’s new Caira device uses Google’s new Nano Banana AI image model to manipulate your photos.
- Caira uses a MagSafe iPhone mount and interchangeable lenses to take the initial photo on your smartphone.
- Users can change lighting, colors, or any object or aspect of the photo right away without engaging with the Gemini assistant or other tools.
A new device is making Google‘s new Gemini 2.5 Flash Image model, better known as Nano Banana, into a camera, or at least part of a smartphone’s camera. Camera Intelligence has introduced the Caira, a mirrorless camera that attaches to iPhones via MagSafe and has Nano Banana embedded directly in the device.
The combination allows you to take a photo and immediately mess with it using Nano Banana, whether changing the lighting, the color, or turning wine into water, as seen above. It theoretically makes using Nano Banana, best known for making viral 3D figurines from photographs, as frictionless to use as an Instagram filter. Since it’s fully integrated with iOS via MagSafe, you can review, edit, and export directly from your phone.
Camera Intelligence pitches Caira as a way to mix taking a photo and doing post-processing at the same time. And speed can be a big deal, especially if producing content is part of your job.
Caira supports interchangeable Micro Four Thirds lenses, making it the first mirrorless camera to offer this kind of pro-optics-to-AI pipeline. There are also add-ons like an optional battery grip to extend shoot times and a sensor package 400% larger than a typical smartphone camera, giving Caira a solid edge in optical quality before the AI even steps in. You can’t buy a Caira just yet, but it goes live for pre-order on Kickstarter on October 30.
Nano Banana Camera

There are plenty of AI image models out there, but Camera Intelligence went with Nano Banana for its reliability and for making sure photos maintain their quality after editing. That makes it particularly powerful for commercial creators who need fast, clean, client-ready output without spending hours in Lightroom.
“By integrating Nano Banana directly into Caira, we are collapsing traditional content creation workflows; we aim to fundamentally shift how creators capture, edit, and share our world,” Camera Intelligence CEO Vishal Kumar explained in a statement. “We chose Google’s Nano Banana because it’s the best model we’ve seen for maintaining consistent character details and seamlessly blending new edits whilst preserving the original image’s optical quality. Its one-shot editing capability is also exceptional, frequently delivering perfect results in a single attempt without unwanted hallucinations. It truly feels like magic.”
Of course, all this power comes with responsibility. Camera Intelligence says it’s committed to what it calls an “ethics-first” development strategy, and Caira will include built-in AI guardrails. Users can’t alter skin tone, ethnicity, or core facial features, and edits that manipulate personal identity in inappropriate ways will be blocked at the prompt level.
The system is built to comply with Google’s own Generative AI Prohibited Use Policy, and the company says it’s working with professional photographers and ethics researchers to establish best practices for responsible creative editing.
That balance will be closely watched. Generative editing at the point of capture is a powerful capability, and while Camera Intelligence says it’s limiting identity-warping functionality, it’s easy to imagine edge cases emerging as users test the limits of what the AI can do with lighting, body shapes, or context shifts.
Still, having Caira instead of taking a DSLR photo and editing on a MacBook is obviously appealing when you’re on the go or in a rush. But as good as the AI may be as an editor and toy for silly photos, it’s only a tool, not a replacement for real photographic artistry. Thinking otherwise would be bananas, nano, or any other size.
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