How to use this template and how to write a good Midjourney prompt?
To create a vibrant and unique output, it is essential to provide a detailed and descriptive Midjourney prompt.
As a beginner, you can use this template to structure your prompts better and gain inspiration from the provided examples.
To get started, use the database to select the parameters you want to include in your Midjourney prompt.
Remember that you don't need to select parameters from every property; only choose what is necessary for your image.
There are already 30-50+ example parameters in most properties, but feel free to add more. The options on Midjourney are limitless.
Here are the standard parameters explained:
- Subject: This refers to the main theme for your prompt.
- Prompt: This is the finished prompt that you will enter as a Midjourney prompt on Discord.
- Style: This property refers to the style of the prompt. Provide a set of supporting prompt keywords. You can select multiple styles per prompt.
- Scenery: To be even more specific, select a particular scenery for your prompts, such as GTA, Mars, or Wild West.
- Artist: Use this property to create images in the style of your favorite artist.
- Emotion: Add emotions to your prompt to make the outcome even more unique.
- Lightning: Choose how you want your image exposed. This can significantly change your image.
- Camera: Create prompts in the style of a specific camera or lens.
- Colors: Add colors that should be included in the prompt.
- Materials: Try experimenting with adding different materials. For example, you can create an image of Anubis as a chocolate statue.
- Ratio: Select the aspect ratio of your prompt.
- Height & Width: Midjourney creates pictures between 512 x 512 and 1664 x 1664 pixels, but you can also specify the exact height and width in your prompt.
- Image Prompt: Base your prompt on a picture you have uploaded to Discord. To use the image, simply type the URL into this property.
- Image Weight: To adjust the importance of the image URLs vs. the text, the default value is 0.25, but you can specify a higher --iw value for more impact on the finished job.
In addition, here are the advanced parameters explained:
- Chaos: Use
-chaos <number 0–100> to change how varied the results will be. Higher values produce more unusual and unexpected generations.
- Don’t include (no): Use
-no to apply negative prompting. For example, -no plants would try to remove plants from the image.
- Quality: Use
-quality <.25, .5, 1, or 2> or -q <.25, .5, 1, or 2> to specify how much rendering quality time you want to spend. The default value is 1, and higher values cost more, while lower values cost less.
- Seed: The Midjourney bot uses a seed number to create a field of visual noise, like television static, as a starting point to generate the initial image grids. Seed numbers are generated randomly for each image, but you can specify the same seed number with the
-seed <integer between 0–4294967295> or -sameseed parameter to produce similar ending images.
- Style Version: Switch between versions of the Midjourney Model Version 4 with the
-style <4a, 4b or 4c> parameter.
Find our abbrieviated list of parameters here otherwise take a look at the midjourney documentation below.
Learn more: https://docs.midjourney.com/docs/parameter-list