9 Tricks for Writing AI Prompts to Create the Best Midjourney Portraits (2024)

Table of Contents
Midjourney AI Basics What Is Midjourney AI? How Do You Use Midjourney AI? Can Midjourney Create Art From Any Word Combinations? I’m New to Making AI Art and Writing Prompts. What Words Should I Use (and in What Order) Render a Great-Looking MidJourney Portrait? What Are Some SPECIFIC IDEAS FOR PROMPT PORTRAITS to Help you Get Started? How Do You Get Access to Use Midjourney? 7 Tricks for Making the Best Midjourney Portraits 1. Use Repetition 2. Copy from the Best 3. Try a Mash-Up 4. Put in an Emoji 5. Include “Raphaelite” 6. Take Advantage of the Upscale Button 7. Think About Time Period 8. Add in “School Photo” or “Mugshot” 9. KISS. Bonus Trick for Creating Midjourney Portraits Tips for Enhancing Midjourney Portraits curating a Collection of Midjourney Outputs Sample Portraits Made With Midjourney Additional FAQs About Midjourney Portraits What Makes Midjourney AI Such a Special Tool for Creating Portraits? Does Midjourney Steal Stock Art to Create New AI Art? Why Are There Watermarks on My Outputs? How Do You Stop the Midjourney Bot From Signing the IMages It Renders? What Type of Art Does Midjourney AI Have the Easiest Time Generating? Are There Any Limits to Prompts Used With Midjourney? What Is Midjourney AI’s Greatest Weakness When Fabricating Human Portraits? What Is a Good Alternative Tool for Creating AI-Generated Portraits? I’m an Illustrator. Will Midjourney Steal My Job? Why Should I Hire an Artist to Paint My Likeness if Midjourney AI Can Create Awesome Portraits? Who Owns MidJourney Portraits That You Make With the Bot? What’s the Deal with Paid Memberships? After Joining, Where Can You Learn More About Memberships and Other Rules? The Ethics of Midjourney Portraits and Other AI-GENERATED Art Still Have Questions? You Might Also Like … FAQs

Last updated August 1, 2022 | Most days, my spare time is often spent making handmade stuff. That changed when I got the most amazing gift for my birthday in May: an invitation to use MidJourney, the AI-powered tool for generating digital art. And, so far, my fave type of synthetic images to make are MidJourney portraits.

(Note: MidJourney AI is now available to everyone. Get in by going here then come back to get ideas for writing better prompts.)

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After spending a couple of weeks getting to know the ins and outs of using this rad technology, though, I’ve discovered that rendering decent-looking portraits seems to be one of the most challenging output types for this app to get right.

That’s why I wanted to write a blog post to help others refine their prompt-writing process with MidJourney so they can generate the best possible images (and avoid repeating my mistakes).

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For folks like me with very little natural ability to draw, the idea that I can turn what’s in my head into art without a paintbrush is exciting. That said, it’s kind of boring just to push a button and get something beautiful in one try.

The collaborative nature of using MidJourney AI is a large part of its appeal. Having more back and forth to get a generated image to look good (within a community of others from around the globe also trying to figure it out) makes the process more rewarding and fun. (Of course, if you’re self-conscious, I should mention that you can run /imagine commands by chatting directly to the MidJourney bot. But what’s the fun in that?)

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Keep reading to get secrets for writing prompts that will create the most compelling MidJourney portraits, answers to common questions, and view tips for doing minor clean-up in Photoshop and other apps. Plus, see samples of MidJourney images with the inputs I used to make them.

Estimated reading time: 43 minutes

Midjourney AI Basics

What Is Midjourney AI?

Think of MidJourney as an “art-making robot” that you talk to on the web community Discord in order to generate images using artificial intelligence.

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How Do You Use Midjourney AI?

The tool’s nuts and bolts are changing daily so the developers have requested that we don’t share specific screengrabs or how-tos since that information can quickly change.

That said, using the bot is pretty straight forward and once you have access, it is pretty simple.

All you have to do is type in specific prompts to guide the program’s visualization creation process.

Good news! MidJourney AI is now in open beta so everyone is welcome. Head over to this page on the MidJourney website to get access and start creating amazing text to image artwork. (Pro-tip: To speed up your entry, have your Discord login info handy since the bot runs from there.)
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Can Midjourney Create Art From Any Word Combinations?

It’s essential to keep in mind that MidJourney is like other AI tools regarding how it processes language. From what I’ve observed, it won’t “read” text the same way you and I do.

While we might be keen on a story, you’ll likely get better results if you write AI prompts that are straightforward and clear. That’s because MidJourney’s text-to-image bot appears to segment anything you input.

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It takes each of these individual “tokens” as separate commands and uses them to process and output different AI-imagined images for you. So when you write in sentences to describe what you want, it will try to figure out what you want and then pick and choose which words from your blurb to use.

That said, sometimes the most incredible stuff you’ll see come out of MidJourney is content that another user made by pasting in their favorite song lyric, a line from a movie, a verse of poetry, or random word combos.

For instance, my niecelet’s self-selected nickname is “Nugget Nightmare.” It’s silly and doesn’t mean much when you read it, but the portrait that MidJourney created for that input was crazy cool.

If you have GPU time to spare on processing randomness, it might be worth it to see if you can generate something interesting.

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I’m New to Making AI Art and Writing Prompts. What Words Should I Use (and in What Order) Render a Great-Looking MidJourney Portrait?

Every prompt starts with the simple command “/imagine” but what you put after that (and the order of those words) is how the AI bot knows what to do to make the magic happens.

Recommended MidJourney Portrait Prompt Hierarchy

For the most predictable text-to-image portrait outputs, your prompt should basically be a formula of X + Y + Z where the words in the X component of your prompt describe what you want (and its characteristics), Y provides style-related preferences, and Z covers size and render information.

X then Y then Z is also the order that I recommend you use to give the MidJourney bot instructions about the image you want it to help to create for you.

Here’s a further breakdown of what I mean (with specifics) for the X, Y, and Z components of your prompt:

X Is FOR WHAT YOU WANT MIDJOURNEY TO OUTPUT

Start by giving MidJourney a clear and succinct description of who is the subject of your desired AI portrait. Here are some examples of what you might tell its bot:

  • /imagine punk rock fred flintstone :: mugshot
  • /imagine portrait of saint joan of arc in silver armor :: triumphant
  • /imagine pakistani activist malala yousafzai :: portrait

Y IS FOR WHICH STYLES YOU WANT MIDJOURNEY TO USE

After you’ve picked words to tell MidJourney what you want, it’s time to choose additional words to let its text-to-image art-making tool what it should take as inspiration to create your output. Here are some examples of what you might tell its bot to cover these important aesthetic details:

  • /imagine punk rock fred flintstone :: mugshot :: in the style of jamie hewlett
  • /imagine portrait of saint joan of arc in silver armor :: triumphant :: watercolor painting :: bright lighting :: pink pastel colors
  • /imagine pakistani activist malala yousafzai :: portrait :: simple yet detailed :: black and white ink sketch

Z IS FOR HOW YOU WANT MIDJOURNEY TO FORMAT YOUR RENDERINGS

Last, but not least, you should give MidJourney some words in your prompt that address the shape and format you’re hoping for. Here are some examples of what you might write:

  • /imagine punk rock fred flintstone :: mugshot :: in the style of jamie hewlett :: ‐‐uplight
  • /imagine portrait of saint joan of arc in silver armor :: triumphant :: watercolor painting :: bright lighting :: pink pastel colors :: ‐‐ar 4:5
  • /imagine pakistani activist malala yousafzai :: portrait :: simple yet detailed :: black and white ink sketch :: ‐‐s 1000 ‐‐v 3
How to Set Preferences in MidJourneyAre you a big fan of light upscale? Prefer MJ version 2 over MJ version 3? Cut down on what you have to type with each prompt and share your prefered settings with MidJourney’s bot. To set your preferences, all you have to do is type “/settings” into Discord. This will bring up a panel of buttons you can click (or un-click) to visually adjust your user settings.
What Does ‐‐S Do?

Adding — s informs the MidJourney bot how much “stylization” you want your images to have. That is, how much do you want MidJourney to do its own thing and go rogue when generating AI art. The default stylization setting is 2500 but you can go super high.

As the official user manual jokes, if you include ‐‐s 60000 (the maximum), “who knows what will happen.” On the other hand, if you write ‐‐s 625 (the minimum), MidJourney will produce results that are less artistic.

What Does ‐‐Uplight Do?

Sometimes a final upscaled image can vary drastically from the original variation you saw. If you want to make sure your upscaled image looks more like your first picture, the addition of ‐‐uplight to a prompt tells MidJourney that you’d like for its bot to add fewer details during the upscale process.

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What Does ‐‐HD Do?

Adding ‐‐hd tells the AI art bot to use a different algorithm which can help produce better larger images, however, the MidJourney developers caution that its inclusion can sometimes result in more varied compositions in your outputs.

What Does ‐‐AR Do?

By default, MidJourney will give you square images, but sometimes you want a picture that is horizontal or vertical. You can change the aspect ratio (or AR) by adding your request in a format it can understand (using something like ‐‐ar 9:16 or ‐‐ar 4:5).

If you are creating a general scene, changing the aspect ratio usually doesn’t present any challenges, but this isn’t the case with portraits. A vertical aspect ratio, when doing a portrait, sometimes means MidJourney will give you a person with a really long neck. On the other hand, requesting an extreme landscape-shaped image might result in MidJourney putting two heads into your image to fill the space.

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What Does ‐‐V Do?

MidJourney’s amazing guide covers image parameters in more detail here, but adding ‐‐v with 1, 2, or 3 tells the bot which version of MJ you want it to use for your output.

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What Does ‐‐Wallpaper Do?

MidJourney’s amazing guide covers image parameters in more detail here, but adding ‐‐wallpaper simplifies the information you need to include in your prompt to communicate (and can replace ‐‐w 1920 ‐‐h 1024 ‐‐hd).

Commas vs. Colons—What Does What?The current consensus is that you should use commas in your prompts for soft breaks and double colons (::) for hard breaks. From the examples I’ve provided in the post, you’ll notice that I like to flip-flop between both in my prompts. Do what you like best and that gives you the best results.

What Are Some SPECIFIC IDEAS FOR PROMPT PORTRAITS to Help you Get Started?

First, my advice would be to pick a subject for your MidJourney portrait. The more well-known the individual, the more images the AI tool will have to mine as inspiration.

For instance, if you decide to try and generate a portrait of one of the ladies from the Real Housewives of Dubai, it will be much harder to produce great results since they aren’t as well known as someone like Albert Einstein or Santa Claus.

Who you pick as your muse and their fame level (aka, how many pictures of them are available online that MidJourney AI can reference) will influence the quality of your results. I also read that its image source databases, as of right now, don’t go beyond 2019.

This means, for example, that the bot doesn’t have any visual references to current events, such as the Amber Heard and Johnny Depp trial. If you want MidJourney AI to generate a rendering that shows a “mega pint” of wine, it’s going to be up to you to feed it the right words in your input to get a fitting image.

Second, I like to think about what type of image I want. For instance, if I am going for something fantastical, I might combine my subject with a term for something that’s visually iconic.

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Some Words for MidJourney Prompts That Can Generate Interesting Outputs

  • Ghost
  • Goblin
  • Goddess
  • Gnome
  • Gremlin
  • Jester
  • Joker
  • King
  • Knight
  • Leprechaun
  • Mecha
  • Mermaid
  • Monster
  • Mummy
  • Ninja
  • Orc
  • Pirate
  • Queen
  • Robot
  • Saint
  • Skeleton
  • Soldier
  • Spirit
  • Superhero
  • Toy
  • Troll
  • Vampire
  • Witch
  • Wizard
  • Zombie
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Most of the time, though, I enjoy seeing what I get when I create a portrait by matching a person to an art movement, artist, or painting style.

Third, I like to figure out what to try by imagining which treatment or technique would best complement the person and fit with the look I want for my output.

Do I want a hyper-realistic graphic or a more conceptual image? If it’s someone with crazy curly hair, a rigid or geometry-based style like pixel art format isn’t likely the best fit, but an ink painting might work nicely.

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Have You Run Out of AI Prompt Ideas? Need Some Help Getting Started?It feels like each day new AI prompt tools get released to make creating art with tools like the MidJourney bot even easier. Here are two prompt generators that I’d recommend:Prompter for MidJourney is one of the newest free prompt builders for desktop users, and it was created by Shane McGeehan. This Midjourney prompt writing tool Google Sheets-based so if you are already a Google user, you can make a copy to save the tool right to your Drive. Plus, you can click the SAVE button and it will copy the current prompt to your “My Prompts” sheet with date and time. (Note: this action runs via an external script so when you click the button, it will ask if you want to allow permission to the script. Once you accept it, it’ll work every time.)PromptMANIA is a free prompt builder (and there are no annoying ads either) that was created to help users make AI art and it works with MidJourney. I especially appreciate its complexity/speed calculator (which you can use to prevent overloading the text-to-image bot with prompts that are too tricky) and the tool’s ability to send the prompts you write over to Discord without having to copy-and-paste.MidJourney Styles & Keywords Reference is a Github repository managed by willwulfken that covers the differences between past versions of MidJourney and the latest version 3 release.

Inspiration for AI Prompts

Jumpstart your AI combinations by mining this list of painting styles, art movements, formats, treatments, techniques, and time periods for words to use for inputs to create art with MidJourney:

A–D
  • Abstract Expressionism
  • Acrylic Painting
  • Anime
  • Arts & Crafts
  • Art Deco
  • Art Nouveau
  • Assemblage
  • Atelier Populaire
  • Avant-Garde
  • Ballpoint Pen Art
  • Baroque
  • Bauhaus
  • Belle Époque
  • Biomorphic
  • Brocade
  • Brushwork
  • Byzantine
  • Caricature
  • Cartes-de-Visite
  • Cartoon
  • Celluloid
  • Charcoal Drawing
  • Chiaroscuro
  • Chromogenic Color Print
  • Classicism
  • CoBrA
  • Collage
  • Conceptual Art
  • Constructivism
  • Cubism
  • Dadaism
  • Daguerreotype
  • De Stijl
  • Der Blaue Reiter
  • Diptych
  • Divisionism
  • Doodle
  • Double Exposure
  • Drypoint
E–N
  • École des Beaux-Arts
  • Encaustic Painting
  • Engraving
  • Etching
  • Expressionism
  • Exquisite Corpse
  • Fauvism
  • Foreshortening
  • Fresco
  • Frottage
  • Futurism
  • Gelatin Silver Print
  • Geometric
  • Glass Painting
  • Gond Painting
  • Gouache
  • Grotesque
  • Halftone
  • Harlem Renaissance
  • Hieroglyphics
  • Impasto
  • Impressionism
  • Ink Drawing
  • Kalamkari Painting
  • Kinetograph
  • Lacquer
  • Line Drawing
  • Lithograph
  • Lomo Photography
  • Madhubani Painting
  • Manga
  • Minimalism
  • Monochrome
  • Needlepoint
  • Neo-Impressionism
  • Neoclassicism
  • Neue Sachlichkeit
O–Z
  • Oil Painting
  • Old Master
  • Op Art
  • Paint Splatter
  • Papier-Collé
  • Paper Cutting
  • Papier-Mâché
  • Pencil Sketch
  • Phad Painting
  • Pixar
  • Pixel Art
  • Photogravure
  • Pointillism
  • Pop Art
  • Post-Impressionism
  • Post-Modernism
  • Raphaelite
  • Renaissance
  • Rococo
  • Screenprint
  • Sculpture
  • Steampunk
  • Stencil
  • Surrealism
  • Suprematism
  • Tissue Paper
  • Triptych
  • Trompe L’oeil
  • Warli Painting
  • Watercolor
  • Woodcuts / Wood Block Prints
  • Works Progress Administration
  • Ziggurat

To keep your inputs from getting too complex for MidJourney, I try to stick to only one or two from the list above so that it doesn’t get overwhelmed by trying to combine too many ideas into one picture.

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Similarly, you can also try to see what you get if you combine your subject with a famous work of art (e.g., Mona Lisa (see the sample shown above), American Gothic, Girl with a Pearl Earring, Portrait of Adele Bloch Bauer I, etc.).

Alternatively, you could pair your subject with the name of a famous portrait artist. Below is a list of some of my favorite well-known artists for their portraits.

List of Well-Known Portrait Artists for Making MiDJourney Faces

A–D
  • John Samuel Agar
  • Sofonisba Anguissola
  • Pietro Annigoni
  • Giuseppe Arcimboldo
  • Francis Bacon
  • Elizabeth Bakewell
  • H. Walter Barnett
  • J. M. Barrie
  • Vanessa Bell
  • Giovanni Bellini
  • Gustave Caillebotte
  • Caravaggio
  • Paul Cézanne
  • Chuck Close
  • Petrus Christus
  • Joseph Collyer the Younger
  • Agnolo di Cosimo
  • Jeanne Bernard Dabos
  • William Daniell
  • Jacques-Louis David
  • Edgar Degas
  • Eugène Delacroix
  • Otto Dix
  • Emilio P. Fiaschi
  • Lucian Freud
  • Roger Fry
G–R
  • Paul Gauguin
  • Artemisia Gentileschi
  • Shadi Ghadirian
  • Vincent van Gogh
  • Francisco Goya
  • George Henry Harlow
  • Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
  • Frida Kahlo
  • Walter Keane
  • Gustav Klimt
  • Pyotr Konchalovsky
  • Jan Lievens
  • August Macke
  • Édouard Manet
  • Henri Matisse
  • Quentin Matsys
  • Anton Raphael Mengs
  • Elizabeth Peyton
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Raphael
  • Pierre-Auguste Renoir
  • Rembrandt van Rijn
  • Norman Rockwell
S–Z
  • John Singer Sargent
  • Jenny Saville
  • Egon Schiele
  • Amy Sherald
  • Cindy Sherman
  • Ralph Steadman
  • Gilbert Stuart
  • Diego Velázquez
  • Johannes Vermeer
  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Andy Warhol
  • Kehinde Wiley
  • James McNeill Whistler
  • Grant Wood
  • Andrew Wyeth
  • Craig Wylie
  • Jonathan Yeo

Want to go beyond portraits? The Disco Diffusion Artist Study Database is a great Google Sheet to refer to for even more artist inspiration.

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How Do You Get Access to Use Midjourney?

Great news! Invitations are no longer needed as of July 13, 2022.

Though MidJourney AI was still in private or closed beta when I gained access, it’s now in open beta and available to anyone.

Woohoo! Anyone who heads to this special landing page can request access.

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7 Tricks for Making the Best Midjourney Portraits

There’s a saying that goes, “garbage in, garbage out,” that applies to using MidJourney to make portraits. Though there is a little bit of luck when you use the tool, what you input definitely has an effect on what you output.

And, even when you get to something close to what you want, sometimes the results are still a little “uncanny valley.”

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1. Use Repetition

When you see exceptionally unique MidJourney portraits, the chances are good that the image was created after a very patient user used the tool to generate many different iterations.

The V1, V2, V3, and V4 buttons are your friend. Use them until you end up with one image that is close to the visualization you had in mind.

If that doesn’t work and your results are off, keep tweaking your input. Make subtle additions (or subtractions) one at a time to see how each change helps to vary (and hopefully improve) your outputs.

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2. Copy from the Best

Working in MidJourney is a collaborative process. You can see what everyone is doing, and they can see what you are doing.

All work is shared out in the open. That means you can build on someone else’s generated art and they can push out variations from what you initialize with the AI bot.

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One of my favorite sources of inspiration for making MidJourney portraits is to look at sample outputs from users whose work you enjoy and see what words they are using in their prompts. Then, I copy key elements from their wording to create my own prompts that I can use to iterate different visualizations.

How to Get More Sharp-Dressed AI Portrait SubjectsClothing can sometimes be an issue for the MidJourney art-drawing bot. The good news is that with tightly-cropped portraits, the “not-being-great-yet-at-rendering-clothes” issue is less of a problem than with other types of compositions where you’d see a person’s full body. However, if goofy renderings of clothes irritate you, one workaround (to avoid odd collars, weird turtlenecks, and other shirts with strange necklines) is to tell MidJourney in your AI prompt that you’d like the subject of your portrait to be draped in robes or wearing another kind of loose clothing item. For instance, if you were to do a portrait of Bryan Cranston in character as Walter White from Breaking Bad, you might want to tell MidJourney to dress him in a baggy yellow hazmat suit (with the hood down, of course, so you can see his face and know it is in the portrait).

3. Try a Mash-Up

Unexpected combos can lead to great MidJourney portraits. There are a couple of easy ways to do this, but two of my favorite go-tos use these prompt formulas:

  • person one :: person/animal/thing two (e.g., rihanna :: llama)
  • half person one, half person two (e.g., half marilyn monroe, half charlie manson)
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4. Put in an Emoji

Putting an emoji into your input is a great way to say a lot in just one character. It’s not easy to use words to describe what someone looks like when they are being flirty, but the wink emoji is a great way to get that across.

Emojis can also be a great way to provide background details to MidJourney about what your want the general mood to be for your portrait. A couple of my favorites that I like to add to the end of my prompts include the Milky Way and “high voltage” lightning bolt.

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5. Include “Raphaelite”

Adding “Raphaelite” to any input is the quickest and easiest way to get more realistic and beautiful MidJourney portraits. This can make even general posts in the style of another artist look more effervescent and gorgeous, e.g.:

  • oprah winfrey :: raphaelite portrait in the style of john singer sargent
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What to Do for More Detail Earlier in the Iteration ProcessAnother great way to ramp up your results is to add “high quality” or “4K” to the end of your prompt text. This tells MidJourney’s text-to-image tool that you’d like less rough outputs from the get go for your input.

6. Take Advantage of the Upscale Button

Before you make variations, consider doing an upscale first. That extra bit of visualization effort can sometimes get you where you want quicker than just making additional random variations.

If it’s still missing the mark, you can make variations off of your upscaled image to get even better new iterations.

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Benefits of Light Upscale

Sometimes, you don’t want all of the additional detail that a normal upscale will provide. In those cases, light upscale can be a helpful option for upgrading your output without compromising the integrity of the variation you are looking to take elevate.

7. Think About Time Period

Do you want your MidJourney portrait output to look futuristic? From the 1980s? From the 1680s? Adding time period information to your prompt is a great way to help the tool know details about how to make decisions about your portrait subject’s hairstyle, clothing, and more.

Another Way to Add a Sense of TimeA variation on the idea of time is to add “baby,” “toddler,” “young,” “teenage,” “middle-aged,” or “old” as a descriptor for your prompt that you use to generate an AI portrait. For instance, we all know what Justin Bieber looks like doe-eyed and babyfaced as a preteen and young adult, but what will his appearance be like at age 80? If you want to know, write an input that includes “old” or a similar adjective (like “elderly” or “senior”) as a descriptor. This will tell the MidJourney bot that you want to generate an image of what the Biebs will look like when he’s getting up there in years.

8. Add in “School Photo” or “Mugshot”

It’s more powerful to get specific with your prompt instructions. “Portrait” works as a default to tell the text-to-image AI bot that you want to generate a head-and-shoulders image, but more descriptive phrases can give you great results, too. Some of my favorites to add in include:

  • school photo
  • headshot (commercial headshot, legit headshot, theatrical headshot, etc.)
  • selfie / self portrait
  • glamour shot
  • passport photo
  • yearbook photo
  • driver’s license photo
  • polaroid
  • ID photo
  • head and shoulders picture
  • wanted poster
  • environmental portrait
  • mugshot

These simple words in your input let the clever AI tool know that you want a picture of your subject looking straight at the viewer.

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9. KISS.

The acronym “KISS” (or keep it simple, sweetheart) is a good rule of thumb for writing AI prompts. A common newbie problem when using MidJourney is to overstuff their input text. If you give any AI tool too many conflicting ideas to consider during generation, it gets overloaded.

To avoid causing confusion during the process of generating a new visualization, stick with terse, clear descriptions of what you want, e.g.:

  • dolly parton :: portrait :: close up :: paper doll :: circa 1982
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Brevity and directness are good. However, it also helps to be specific.

The official quick start guide includes more helpful tips.

For instance, its authors recommend avoiding the complexities that result from using negatives (e.g., something without something else). Instead, they recommend sticking with positive commands in your AI prompts for generating art.

If you do want to try excluding something from your rendering, see the FAQ below for tips on using the “–no” command in your prompt text.

Preventing Off-Putting Off-Balanced OutputsAt the time I published this post, MidJourney’s AI sometimes tended to overcomplicate things even if a prompt was written in an uncomplicated way. I’ve output human faces with extra mouths, unnatural noses, lopsided eyes, etc. Though generating multiple generations can help you finally land on a piece of art that looks good, one way to help MidJourney along is to add the word “symmetry” or “symmetrical” to your AI prompt text.**** As of July 13, 2022, there is now one way to get around the bot taking so much creative license when making portraits. According to a message posted by David H. to the MidJourney “Announcements” channel on Discord, there is a forthcoming update default image generation setting coming VERY SOON but you can use it now if you include --test to the end of your prompt for:- Faces, scenes, and creatures that are less distorted- Images that are more colorful- Images that are generally more “pretty”- Images that are more “clean” looking by defaultThey also noted that with this setting as a forthcoming default for the MidJourney AI, you’ll need to add words like dirt or grunge to your prompt to achieve that sort of effect.Note: You can only add --test to /imagine right now. It doesn’t work with upscale.

Bonus Trick for Creating Midjourney Portraits

I’ve always thought of my Nana as a very elegant woman. She always had her hair and makeup done perfectly, even though with her natural beauty she needed neither. I took a trip to Prague before she died. On that vacation, I visited the Alphonse Mucha Museum.

My Nana loved seeing my pictures of his work, so I wanted to use MidJourney to create a Mucha-inspired portrait of my Nana. Here’s a step-by-step rundown of what I did.

How to Use a Source Photo with Midjourney

I first picked the perfect image of my Nana, one where her face was isolated so that the tool could easily make out her features. After that, I uploaded the photo to my website to have a URL to include in my prompt. To get the look I was going for, I kept making variations until the program generated an image with the right “bones.” Also, you can use a suffix with the URL for the image you upload (e.g., adding –iw 1.8 … this additional command speaks to the “image weight” of your supplied reference graphic so that MidJourney can use it as a target).

This tiny addition tells the bot to use your provided picture as a significant influence for MidJourney’s derivative portrait output. You should place it at the very end of your prompt and include your source image URL at the start with additional tidbits in the middle).

In short, taking the time to add this extra direction to MidJourney’s AI tool is an excellent way to get results closer to features in your initial photo. For copyright reasons, it will never copy a supplied image exactly.

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I made several different variations of my favorite from the bunch, then upscaled it, ran upscale max, and finished with upscale light. These steps helped refine the image further and remove some of the odd artifacts around the eyes and mouth.

I finished with some Photoshopping to clean up the rough edges and fix her nose.

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Sometimes, the initial upscale feature in Midjourney helps you get what you want.

But, other times, it does too much, providing extra detail that detracts from your generated image.

Here’s what to do to limit the potential for AI art messes.

Add “–stop 80” (as a parameter at the end of your initial prompt).

The addition of this short command in your prompt can act as a pretty decent solution.

After you get a variation you like, upscale it as usual.

Then, do a light upscale followed by a light upscale max.

Including “–stop 80” from the get go often is just enough to help prevent the text-to-image tool from going too far.

I’ve found this tiny addition (as well as “symmetrical”) in your first prompt input helps eliminate some unnecessary or distracting details, like bizarre nostrils, etc.

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Tips for Enhancing Midjourney Portraits

I stick with Photoshop for enhancing my MidJourney portraits. This process is often referred to as “overpainting.”

It requires that you have some skill with using the program, not to mention an Adobe Creative Cloud license, to use this program to tweak faces, fix eyes, repair wonky ears, and remove strange waves of hair.

If you are looking for alternatives, you can sharpen details and fix small problems with easy-to-use and affordable (or free!) “deep fake” photo-enhancing AI apps, such as:

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curating a Collection of Midjourney Outputs

Do androids dream of electric sheep? If they have access to MidJourney AI, those bots mentioned in the title of Philip K. Dick’s famous novel wouldn’t have to fall asleep to picture wooly beasts made of circuit boards and gears.

This fantastic tool allows anyone with a computer and web connection to become an AI-dreamer. Here are some samples of my favorite portrait outputs from MidJourney.

I also have included the AI prompts that I used to create them (unless otherwise noted, all of the examples’ prompts also included the word “portrait” so that the bot would focus on generating head-and-shoulders images).

Sample Portraits Made With Midjourney

All of the options shown below are unedited outputs saved directly from the AI art creation tool (aka, I haven’t fixed them in Photoshop yet).

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To see how slightly different prompts change the look of the same portrait subject, check out this blog post with more MidJourney examples.

Additional FAQs About Midjourney Portraits

What Makes Midjourney AI Such a Special Tool for Creating Portraits?

MidJourney AI is so awesome. It has the power to create something completely new out of just a few words. Even its goofs are pretty mind-blowing.

Whether you use it to explore portrait ideas or as a starting point for doing some overpainting, MidJourney AI is a mighty visualization app.

If you have trouble getting started, you’ll love that it makes the iteration steps go really fast.

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Does Midjourney Steal Stock Art to Create New AI Art? Why Are There Watermarks on My Outputs? How Do You Stop the Midjourney Bot From Signing the IMages It Renders?

Sometimes, it looks like the MidJourney tool is copying and using stock photos and royalty-free images hosted by Getty or Shutterstock because there are artifacts on outputs. Adding something like two hyphens followed by no watermarks or no logos, etc., to your prompt copy is a good workaround to clean up your results and remove these distracting elements.

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What Type of Art Does Midjourney AI Have the Easiest Time Generating?

MidJourney AI excels at creating images that aren’t realistic. It does a great job of purposefully drawing stuff that looks unnatural. If you search the #midjourney hashtag on Instagram or Twitter, you can see many great samples of unreal landscapes.

As such, it’s much harder to find really excellent outputs of MidJourney portraits. This is mainly because both users and the program itself seem to have a more challenging time getting stunning results for this type of art.

For instance, if you want to output “Bruce Willis as a robot,” it probably won’t be a problem. He’s bald and clean-shaven. The AI tool doesn’t have to worry about how to render hair, etc.

With a bit of fiddling and a few different outputs, you can probably knock it out of the park since you’re creating something that isn’t meant to look like anything that actually exists. However, if you want to make a realistic portrait of Zendaya, the program will likely struggle to generate something that believably resembles the multi-hyphenate star.

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Are There Any Limits to Prompts Used With Midjourney?

You are only limited by your imagination. Still, there are a few “technical” restrictions.

For instance, you can’t use certain words. MidJourney limits some terms that have the potential to generate overly sexualized or extra horrific images.

All of this is spelled out, though, in the guidelines, so there are no surprises. Even with these minor restrictions in place, you can create pretty much anything your heart desires.

What Is Midjourney AI’s Greatest Weakness When Fabricating Human Portraits?

If you take a critical look at the program’s output, you can identify flaws, especially if you want to create more realistic portraits. For instance, image edges are often rough, and things often will meld together unpleasantly.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to scrap an otherwise perfectly good MidJourney portrait because the program decided to do something like make a thumb grow out of the person’s neck.

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What Is a Good Alternative Tool for Creating AI-Generated Portraits?

Many of the artists in the MidJourney community also rave about using DALLE-2 for creating portraits and other art; however, I haven’t used it. The pieces I’ve seen from it, though, make it look like a promising alternative to MidJourney.

I’m an Illustrator. Will Midjourney Steal My Job?

Much of the output from MidJourney AI won’t elicit that same feeling that art that was drawn by a real human will. Its pieces lack real depth and often have a slightly-detached and hollow look to them.

For instance, during the mid-19th to early-20th century, many artists were nervous about the growing popularity of cameras. They worried photography might eclipse (or even replace) traditional types of art. However, today, as we all know, illustration and photography are both highly-regarded formats for art.

Inevitably, text-to-image AI portraits won’t ever wholly replace other methods. Instead, using computer tools will just be considered another way that artists can use for portraiture.

Why Should I Hire an Artist to Paint My Likeness if Midjourney AI Can Create Awesome Portraits?

It seems like it will still be quite some time before MidJourney AI and other AI bots have the potential to totally replace traditional portrait painters among consumers who want a piece of art for their home. That’s because these tools still require clients to describe what they really want with accuracy and clarity.

MidJourney isn’t going to ask you follow-up questions about composition nor follow all of your commands when it generates an output. Plus, even more simply, they don’t have the same limitless imagination that humans have.

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Who Owns MidJourney Portraits That You Make With the Bot?

Generally speaking, according to US and EU law, you can’t copyright AI-generated art. When I first started to use MidJourney in May, its terms of service for the tool stated that “All content generated … is owned by MidJourney.” But, that’s old news!

As of July 16, 2022, the new terms of service—as summarized by MidJourney’s David H.—are significantly more permission. To the community on MidJourney’s Discord, he wrote that “Instead of MJ having ownership over images and licensing back to creators, we’re going to try flipping that around. The creators now have ownership, but grant MJ an unlimited license. To be clear, one of the many things we use the unlimited license for is to continue to allow remixing and openness the community enjoys.”

What’s the Deal with Paid Memberships?

If you work for a business that makes more than one million in gross revenue, you must buy a corporate membership to use the assets you generate for your company.

If you are a paid member, you can use your assets “without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, and sell copies of the assets.”

Spellcheck Your MidJourney PromptsIf you’re on a tight budget and paying for your prompts, get the most for your money by proofreading what you’ve written before hitting the enter button.There’s nothing more disappointing than wasting GPU processing time to render a prompt that includes a big old typo. About 99% of the time when I’ve had an error like that in my prompt, the results have been awful and unusable. I rarely get “happy accidents” from my poorly edited prompts.As of right now, MidJourney’s bot isn’t as clever as Google. It won’t make an educated guess at what you meant if you misspell something in your prompt.

After Joining, Where Can You Learn More About Memberships and Other Rules?

For the latest and most complete information, go to the original source! You can do that by heading to the #rules channel on Discord. It may be templating to skip to making art, but you should review the latest terms of service first.

It covers restrictions for what you can do with any MidJourney portraits that you generate.

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The Ethics of Midjourney Portraits and Other AI-GENERATED Art

I have several friends and family members who make their livelihoods as photographers and illustrators. That’s why whether or not making art with AI tools is ethical is on my radar. Despite those connections, however, I’m not an ethicist or expert on the matter.

At this point, I use MidJourney and other AI tools solely for personal joy, so it’s not been an issue for me, but it is a matter that’s top of mind with many researchers and other experts.

If you’d like to learn more about this subject of debate, I recommend reading the Ada Lovelace Institute’s article covering different viewpoints as a starting point.

Still Have Questions?

Feel free to contact me on Discord. My username there is joyous#8616. I’d be happy to answer your questions (if I can) the next time I hop on to make some new art using MidJourney.

Alternatively, if you use Facebook, consider joining the MidJourney AI group. It’s a semi-active community of seasoned users and newbies alike where you can ask questions, troubleshoot problems, get ideas for new AI art, and share samples of your best work.

The only reason I’ve made progress with this cool tool is because of all of the kind, creative, and smart people in the group (and their willingness to pass along tips). Come join us!

You Might Also Like …

  • 56 Awesome MidJourney Examples to Jumpstart Your AI Portrait Generating
  • Fixing MidJourney Faces: 4 Free Ways to Clean-Up AI Images with Distortions
  • Fun DIY Bookmarks from Reader’s Digest Spines to Make in 5 Minutes
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FAQs

How do I get the best out of Midjourney? ›

It shows the correct way to use a prompt is to first put the image URL second to put in any keyword

How do I try Midjourney AI? ›

1) Create a Discord account if you don't have one already. 2) Go to Midjourney.com and sign up for the beta. 3) After you link your Discord account, navigate to the Midjourney server and look for the “Newbie" bot channels. 4) In the channel - type /imagine and then whatever you can imagine.

How do I use Midjourney AI on Discord? ›

And simply register to discord the second step is to go to mid journey.com. Here is a sign in button

How do I use an image as a prompt in Midjourney? ›

And go to open image in new tab come to the new tab. And select the whole url copy it come back to

Can I sell Midjourney art as NFT? ›

Midjourney AI generated art can be used for commercial purposes. According to their standard license, users can use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and /or sell copies of the images they generate, except for blockchain technology. So no, you can't just generate AI art NFTs.

Can anyone Midjourney? ›

Anyone with a basic knowledge of accessing the Internet and Discord can use Midjourney for free. If you feel stuck giving text-to-image prompts, you can use free prompt generators.

Can you use Midjourney commercially? ›

Can You Use Images Generated with Midjourney Commercially? Yes, if you are a paid member, you can use images generated with Midjourney commercially according to their terms [3]. Subject to the above license, you own all Assets you create with the Services.

What is relax mode on Midjourney? ›

/fast and /relax toggles between "fast" and "relax" mode. In fast mode, if you are out of jobs, your jobs will be incrementally billed. In relax mode, your jobs do not cost, but take longer to generate.

How does Midjourney AI work? ›

Midjourney uses a freemium business model, with a limited free tier and paid tiers that offer faster access, greater capacity, and additional features. Holz told The Register in August 2022 that the company was already profitable. Users create artwork with Midjourney using Discord bot commands.

What is the best AI art Generator? ›

Let's jump into the reviews!
  • Jasper Art. Best All-in-One AI Art Generator. ...
  • Nightcafe. Best for Easy Access. ...
  • Stable Diffusion. Best for Image-to-Image Art. ...
  • Photosonic. Best for Bloggers and Content Creators. ...
  • DALL-E 2. Best for Generating Photorealistic Images. ...
  • MidJourney. Best for Quality. ...
  • Fotor. ...
  • Deep Dream Generator.

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