5 Advanced Midjourney Prompting Techniques to Create Stunning AI Art

You’ve mastered the basics of Midjourney. You can generate a “cyberpunk city” or a “photorealistic cat” with ease. But you’ve hit a wall. Your images are good, but they lack precise control, feel a bit generic, and you definitely can’t get the same character to appear twice. How do you get to the next level?

The secret isn’t just in what you ask for, but how you ask for it. While the core principles of clear communication are key to all AI (which we cover in our Ultimate Guide to Prompt Engineering), Midjourney has its own powerful and specific “language.”

Mastering a few of its advanced commands, or parameters, can be the difference between a random image and a true masterpiece. In this guide, we’ll cover 5 advanced Midjourney prompting techniques to give you precise control over your creations.

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1. Blend Concepts with Multi-Prompting and Weights

One of the first challenges users face is getting Midjourney to understand the relationship between two different subjects.

The Problem: If you type a king holding a lion, Midjourney might create a “lion-king” hybrid, a lion wearing a crown, or a king with feline features. It blends the concepts.

The Solution: Use a multi-prompt by separating your concepts with a double colon (::). This tells Midjourney to consider each concept individually before blending them.

This simple change forces Midjourney to generate a distinct “king” and a distinct “lion” and then figure out how to combine them.

Take it a Step Further with Weights: You can assign relative importance to each part of your prompt by adding a number right after the double colon.


2. Master Key Parameters for Precise Control

Parameters are commands you add to the end of your prompt to change the “rules” of the generation. While there are many, these three are essential for advanced control.

The “Chaos” Parameter: --chaos or --c

What it does: The --chaos parameter controls how varied and “surprising” your initial 4-image grid will be. It accepts a number from 0 to 100.

The “Stylize” Parameter: --stylize or --s

What it does: The --stylize parameter controls how strongly Midjourney’s default “artistic” style is applied. It accepts a number from 0 to 1000 (in V6).

The “Image Weight” Parameter: --iw

What it does: When you use an image prompt (dragging an image into the prompt bar), the --iw parameter tells Midjourney how much to respect your image versus your text. It accepts a number from 0 to 3 (in V6).


3. Save Time with Permutation Prompts {}

This is less about a single image and more about an advanced workflow. If you want to test multiple variations of one idea, you’d normally have to type the prompt over and over. Permutation prompts let you do it all at once.

What it does: By placing a comma-separated list of options inside curly braces {}, you tell Midjourney to create a separate job for each combination.

You can stack them to test multiple variables at once:


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4. Get Consistent Style with Style References (--sref)

This is one of Midjourney’s most powerful new features. It solves the problem of “How do I get the vibe of this image without copying the content?”

What it does: The --sref parameter allows you to use one or more images as a “style reference.” Midjourney will ignore the content of the reference image and apply only its visual aesthetic (colors, mood, lighting, texture) to your new prompt.

How to use it:

  1. Find an image (or images) with a style you love. Upload it to Discord to get a URL, or find a URL online.
  2. Write your prompt.
  3. Add the parameter at the end: --sref https://community.adobe.com/t5/stock-contributors-discussions/can-i-use-quot-style-references-quot-based-on-my-own-images/td-p/14634604

5. Get Consistent Characters with Character References (--cref)

This is the “holy grail” for storytellers and brand builders. It solves the biggest problem in AI art: getting the same character to appear in different scenes.

What it does: The --cref parameter allows you to use an image of a person or character as a “character reference.” Midjourney will try to replicate the character’s key features (face, hair, clothing) in your new prompt.

How to use it:

  1. Generate an image of your character. Upscale your favorite one to get a clean, clear shot.
  2. Copy the URL of that upscaled image.
  3. Write your new prompt with the character in a different scene.
  4. Add the parameter: --cref https://imagedescriber.online/blog/article/ai-character-photo-describer

Conclusion

Mastering these 5 advanced techniques—Multi-Prompting, Parameters, Permutations, Style References, and Character References—elevates you from a simple prompter to an AI art director.

You are no longer just rolling the dice; you are giving Midjourney specific, nuanced instructions to get the exact image you have in your head. The key is to start experimenting. Combine these techniques, test different parameters, and see how you can push the boundaries of your own creativity.

What are your favorite “secret” Midjourney techniques? Share your best tips or prompts in the comments below!


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