Prompt me baby one more time: Tweaking your Midjourney prompts
So, you finally got into Midjourney. However, you prompted βdog astronautβ and all you got back is a hot dog trapped in a lava lamp. Welcome to the club.
But donβt worry β weβve been there. And now weβre here: seasoned, slightly unhinged, and ready to spill 10 actually good, totally usable, and slightly chaotic prompt tricks to level up your AI art game.
Oh, and Midjourney just dropped v6.1 β which means your prompts are now taken more literally, text renders better, and the chaos dial? Spicier than ever. So, letβs make some weird and beautiful things together while keeping with the astronaut theme.
1. Be absurdly specific
Prompt: an astronaut wearing 90s neon pink wraparound sunglasses, sitting on a velvet throne in a gothic castle, hyperrealistic, --v 6
β What this does: Youβre giving the model an aesthetic, a setting, and a vibe. It eats that up.
πReal-life use: Designers who want more than just Pinterest-core visuals. You want a lookbook? Give it context.
π Final result:
2. Use reference art styles like they owe you money
Prompt: an astronaut in the style of Studio Ghibli
β What this does: You instantly get a curated palette and composition framework.
πReal-life use: Artists prototyping character design, or marketers trying to lock down a visual theme.
π Final result:
3. Learn to love --style and --chaos
Prompt: an astronaut floating in space, cinematic lighting, --style raw --chaos 80
β What this does: Chaos gives you dials to steer the art direction.
πReal-life use: Need 30 concepts fast? Crank the chaos and pick your favorites.
π Final result:
4. Juxtapose unrelated things
Prompt: an astronaut made of disco balls swimming underwater with sharks wearing iridescent hospital scrubs
β What this does: The weirdness forces Midjourney to get creative, and you get magic.
πReal-life use: Editorial design, album covers, or just to confuse your Instagram followers.
π Final result:
5. Tell it what not to do
Prompt: an astronaut walking on Mars, --no background or text
β What this does: Prevents Midjourney from giving you those annoying watermarks, random signatures, or surprise limbs.
πReal-life use: Clean assets for print or web design.
π Final result:
6. Embrace camera language
Prompt: cinematic portrait of an astronaut, dramatic lighting, depth of field, 35mm lens
β What this does: Midjourney responds really well to photography terms. Makes things feel polished and real.
πReal-life use: Mockups for film projects or polished headshots that donβt exist.
π Final result:
7. Use parentheses for weighting
Prompt: ((astronaut)) walking through glowing neon fog, cinematic lighting
β What this does: Double parens mean "take this more seriously," like when you shout someone's name in all caps.
πReal-life use: Force your key detail to stand out when other elements keep hogging the attention.
π Final result:
8. Prompt from vibe first, object second
Prompt: dreamlike, misty twilight scene, soft lighting, quiet mood, a lone astronaut silhouetted on a cliff
β What this does: Midjourney paints with atmosphere. Give it the tone, and it brings the drama.
πReal-life use: Book covers, music videos, or your moody Tumblr revival.
π Final result:
9. Stack concepts with ANDs and commas
Prompt: portrait of an astronaut AND biomechanical design, pearls, matte skin, digital painting
β What this does: Makes the prompt more layered and nuanced.
πReal-life use: Hybrid concepts that sound like fashion editorial fever dreams.
π Final result:
10. Remix your own prompts
Take a successful prompt like astronaut in a glowing forest and remix it into: astronaut in a glitchy digital void
β What this does: One prompt becomes ten with minimal brain strain.
πReal-life use: Batch create assets with consistent style, fast.
π Final result:
Final Thoughts
Midjourney isnβt just a magic art machine β itβs a wild, opinionated co-creator. The more fluent you get in prompt language, the more control you get over the chaos. So experiment. Go weird. Prompt like nobodyβs watching.