
Creating Amazing AI Art: A Simple Midjourney Guide
Apr 30
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Welcome! We explore great AI tools to boost your creativity. Today, we're looking at Midjourney AI. This tool makes stunning digital art from text.
Whether you are new to this or want to make your skills better, this guide helps. We cover how to write good prompts, use advanced tips, and change your AI art.
Start with Prompting Basics
Midjourney works by reading text prompts. These are descriptions that tell the AI what picture to make. To get good results, be clear and exact.
Tips for Writing Better Prompts
Be short and direct. Instead of a long sentence like, "a highly detailed painting of a futuristic city with neon colors and cyberpunk looks in a rainy setting at night," try "cyberpunk city, neon lights, rainy night, digital painting."
Use the right words. Be descriptive. Instead of "big," say "gigantic" or "massive." Instead of "beautiful," say "elegant," "stunning," or "mesmerizing."
Numbers matter. If you want more than one thing, say the number. Use "three walking cats," not just "cats in street."
Say what you want. Do not use negative words. Instead of "a cozy reading nook without bright lights and no modern furniture," say "a cozy reading nook with a vintage armchair, house plants, soft lighting, warm tones, realistic." Telling Midjourney what you want helps it create better images.
When you get the basics right, you will make more accurate and visually pleasing AI art.
Ready to make prompting even easier? Explore the TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite. It helps streamline your workflow and get great results faster.
Use More Advanced Prompting Tips
Once you know the basics, you can make your prompts richer. Add details like art styles, time periods, feelings, colors, and places.
Adding Depth and Style to Prompts
Art Styles: Naming an art style changes how your image looks. "Watercolor style cat" creates a soft look. "Pixel art cat" looks like old video games. Try styles like graffiti, ukiyo-e, or oil painting.
Time Periods: Adding a time period gives images a special feel. An "illustration of a 1920s cat" might show art deco style. An "illustration of a 1980s cat" could have bright colors from that time. Try different years or centuries.
Feelings: Emotions add life to your art. "Joyful cat" versus "sad cat" shows different looks. Think about feelings like shy, determined, or sleepy.
Colors: Colors set the mood. Being specific helps. "Neon colored cat" is bright. "Sepia colored cat" has a warm, old look. Try colors like pastel, iridescent, or grayscale.
Places: Putting your subject somewhere changes the story. "Cat in a jungle" is different from "cat in a city." Try places like tundra, desert, or crystal forest. See how the setting changes your images.
Mixing these ideas helps you make prompts that guide Midjourney to create images closer to what you picture. These tips work for anything, not just cats. Use them for people, scenes, or objects. Just try different things and see what matches your style.
Change Your AI Creations
After you make an image, you can change and improve it. Click on your image to see options.
Using Creation Actions
Variations: Make new versions of your image with small or big changes. If you like an image but want to see other takes, use this. Choosing "vary" makes new images based on the first one, keeping the main parts but showing new ideas.
Upscaling: This makes your image bigger. "Creative upscale" makes it bigger and adds small improvements. If you just want a bigger size without changes, choose "subtle upscale." Upscaling helps get better detail.
Remix: This lets you change the text prompt to create a new image based on an old one. You can change the words and other settings. Remix gives you many ways to make new images from ones you already have.
Managing iterations and upscales can take time. The TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite can help automate these steps, making your creative process smoother.
Edit Parts of Your Images
Midjourney has tools to change specific areas of your image.
The Midjourney Editor Tools
Pan: Make your image wider in one direction. This adds more to the scene or changes the shape of the picture. It is good for making scenes larger.
Zoom Out: Add things around the edges of your image. This puts your subject in a bigger setting. Use it to make a wider scene or show your subject in a larger place.
Vary Region (Erase Tool): Edit small parts of your image. Draw over an area, and Midjourney will make a new part there based on your prompt. The rest of the picture stays the same. This is great for specific edits.
Use Other Images as Inspiration
You can build on past work or other images using visual references.
Building with Existing Images
In the options menu for a creation, you find three helpfull tools:
Image Prompt: Use any image as a starting point for a new one. Click "use image prompt." Midjourney looks at the shapes and colors in your chosen image and uses them to help make the next image.
Style Reference: Take the look, colors, light, and layout from one image and apply it to a different subject. This keeps a similar style across your projects.
Character Reference: Keep a character looking consistent in different pictures. Midjourney keeps the character's face, hair, and clothes similar in various settings. This is good for stories or planning.
These options help make Midjourney a platform for creating whole styles and stories, not just single images. All you need are a few clicks and good prompts.
Boost your efficiency and creativity by automating repetitive tasks with the TitanXT Midjourney Automation Suite.
Wrapping Up
This guide gives you a step-by-step look at Midjourney AI. From basic prompts to using advanced ideas and changing your art, these tips can help you make amazing images.
Keep playing with different prompts and settings. Making AI art is about enjoying the process of discovery.






