Adobe Tool -thethingy- Guide

Puppet Warp has no obvious real-world analogue—it’s not a brush, lasso, or eraser. It’s a thing that does a thing with pins. Hence, “thethingy.”

Adobe has added AI-assisted pin detection in Photoshop v26.5, making “thethingy” 40% faster for character animation. Candidate 2: The “Track Matte” Function (After Effects / Premiere Pro) In video editing, the Track Matte is a hidden gem. It uses one layer’s transparency to mask another. Beginners struggle to find it (it’s a dropdown inside the timeline’s “TrkMat” column). Veteran editors joke: “Just apply the matte thingy to the adjustment layer.” ADOBE TOOL -thethingy-

It lacks a physical icon—only text in a cramped column. Its name (“Track Matte”) is technical, so users naturally rename it to “the transparency thingy” or, finally, “thethingy.” Candidate 3: The “Content-Aware Fill” Panel (Photoshop / Premiere) When Adobe introduced Content-Aware Fill as a dedicated panel (rather than a one-click command), users gained sliders for “Color Adaptation,” “Rotation Adaptation,” and “Scale.” That panel is powerful but unintuitive. On Reddit, a top comment reads: “I just move sliders in that thingy until the ghosting disappears.” Puppet Warp has no obvious real-world analogue—it’s not

In the sprawling ecosystem of Adobe Creative Cloud—home to Photoshop, Premiere Pro, After Effects, and Illustrator—users often develop affectionate, if cryptic, nicknames for powerful but obscure tools. One such name has been surfacing on design forums and Slack channels lately: Candidate 2: The “Track Matte” Function (After Effects

“Has anyone seen where ‘thethingy’ went in the latest update?” “I can’t get ‘thethingy’ to work on a mask layer.” “Is ‘thethingy’ only in the Beta?”

If you’ve heard these whispers, you’re not alone. While no Adobe menu officially lists “TheThingy,” our investigation suggests three strong candidates. For many digital artists, the Puppet Warp tool (found under Edit > Puppet Warp ) is the quintessential “thingy.” You drop pins, drag an invisible mesh, and deform a graphic like a marionette. New users often point to the pin icons and say, “You mean… the pin thingy?”