Anthropic announced nine new connectors today that wire Claude directly into the software professional creatives actually use. The list reads like the contents of a working freelancer's dock: Adobe Creative Cloud (Photoshop, Premiere, Express), Affinity, Blender, Ableton, Autodesk, Splice and several others. The announcement on Anthropic's site frames it as an extension of Claude Design from earlier in the month, but the ambition is broader. This is the company trying to sit inside the apps where the work happens, not on a separate tab where the work gets summarised.
The technical mechanism is MCP, the Model Context Protocol Anthropic introduced last year and which has since become the de facto standard for letting an LLM read from and write to outside tools. Each connector is a small server that translates Claude's requests into the host app's native API. The Blender bridge, for example, exposes Blender's Python API as natural language: ask Claude to instance a hundred copies of an object along a curve with random rotation, and it does the equivalent bpy calls. The Ableton connector is more modest, it indexes the official documentation and answers questions, rather than opening a session and arming a track. The Adobe one sits somewhere in between, able to pull assets from Creative Cloud into Claude's context and trigger actions back inside Photoshop and Premiere.
It is worth being clear about what this is and what it is not. None of these connectors replace the practitioner. The Verge notes that Anthropic itself is careful in the announcement copy: "Claude can't replace taste or imagination." The pitch is repetitive manual labour. Renaming layers, batch-tagging clips, building out a hundred variations of a packaging mock, sourcing a sample pack that fits a brief, generating the boring scaffolding around the interesting decisions. The interesting decisions remain a human problem. The argument is that if the boring scaffolding gets cheaper, the interesting decisions get more time.
Whether that argument survives contact with reality depends on which side of a creative team you sit. Senior people who already delegate the scaffolding to juniors will probably love this. The juniors whose job was the scaffolding will not. The historical pattern when tooling absorbs entry-level tasks is not that the work disappears, it is that the bottom rung of the ladder gets sawn off and the people who were supposed to climb it go elsewhere. The studios that are healthiest in five years will be the ones that figured out how to keep training people through the gap.
The strategic read is that Anthropic is now doing to the creative suite what it already did to coding and is trying to do inside the federal government. Pick a high-value professional vertical, ship a connector that makes Claude useful from inside the workflow, accumulate the kind of sticky usage that survives the next model swap. OpenAI, as the Atlantic noted this morning in a separate piece, is reliably about three months behind on this playbook. The follow-on Codex-for-Photoshop announcement should land before August.
The thing I will be watching for is the long tail. Nine connectors on launch day is a press release. Ninety connectors in two years, maintained by a healthy third-party community using the MCP spec, is a platform. Anthropic has been quietly betting that MCP becomes the USB-C of agentic tooling. Today's launch is the loudest evidence so far that the bet is being placed at the application layer, not just the infrastructure layer.
Sources:
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Claude for Creative Work — Anthropic
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Claude can now plug directly into Photoshop, Blender, and Ableton — The Verge
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OpenAI Is Jealous — The Atlantic