business-ecomm_clubhouse/_subsections/02-source_and_choose/S02|L12 - midjourney pt3 - make ai image with reference prompts.org

997 lines
14 KiB
Org Mode
Raw Normal View History

#+title: S02|L12 - midjourney pt3 - make ai image with reference prompts
2025-10-22 22:30:58 +03:00
#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../_share/media/css/ecomm.css" />
#+OPTIONS: H:6
* Links
#+attr_html: :class links
- [[../../toc.org][TOC - ecomm clubhouse]]
2026-03-20 03:17:56 +02:00
- [[https://jellyfin.ronnyabraham.com/web/index.html#/details?id=44219ee1aad759c73033d0af72f346b4&serverId=99488804638e465693eed17924c57b60][video]]
2025-10-22 22:30:58 +03:00
* Notes
- you want to create a lot of images to create a lot of takes
** midjourney discord
*** import
- upload image into the chat
- click on it
- right click on popup
- get image address
*** using
- paste the address into prompt /imagine
- then add the rest of the prompt
- midjourney will use the image as a reference guide
** image weight
- ~-iw [0-3]~
- specifies that the reference is to be maximized
- default is 1
- maximum is 3
** other purpose
- you can use the reference as way to determine the pose
2026-05-04 19:34:06 +03:00
* Review - Using Reference Images in Midjourney
** Summary
This lesson explains how to use reference images in Midjourney to get closer to the image you want faster.
Reference images help Midjourney understand:
- pose
- composition
- structure
- style direction
- what should or should not appear
** Core Idea
Reference images reduce wasted generations.
Instead of relying only on text prompts, you give Midjourney a visual example.
This helps it skip many wrong outputs.
** Why Reference Images Help
Text prompts can be vague.
Example:
#+begin_example
minimalist black line art of a sunflower top down on a white background
#+end_example
Problem:
Midjourney may still add:
- stems
- leaves
- extra angles
- details you did not want
A reference image can show:
- only petals
- no stem
- no leaves
- top-down composition
** Basic Reference Image Workflow [0/5]
- [ ] upload reference image into Midjourney / Discord
- [ ] open the uploaded image
- [ ] right-click and copy image address
- [ ] start a new =/imagine= prompt
- [ ] paste image URL before the text prompt
** Example Prompt
#+begin_example
[image URL] minimalist black line art of a sunflower top down on a white background
#+end_example
** Important Point
Midjourney does not simply copy the reference image.
It uses the image as guidance while also following your text prompt.
So the result is influenced by:
- the uploaded image
- the written prompt
- Midjourneys own generation process
** Flower Example
Without reference image:
- many outputs had stems
- many outputs had leaves
- several images were not close enough
With reference image:
- outputs stayed closer to the petal-only flower
- no unwanted stems
- no unwanted leaves
- fewer wasted generations
** Using Internet Images as References
A reference image can be:
- something you generated earlier
- a public domain image
- a product/design reference
- an image found online
Warning:
Use reference images carefully.
Do not copy protected artwork directly. Use them for structure, style direction, or composition, not pixel-copying.
** Corgi Example
The tutorial uses a corgi image as a pose/style reference.
Goal:
Create a new corgi image in a specific artist/style direction while keeping the pose closer to the reference.
** Image Weight
Image weight controls how strongly Midjourney follows the reference image.
Format:
#+begin_example
--iw 2
#+end_example
In the tutorial:
- =--iw 2= was used
- this was the maximum image weight in that Midjourney version
** Image Weight Effect
*** With High Image Weight
Midjourney prioritizes the reference image.
Result:
- closer pose
- closer structure
- closer overall composition
- less reinterpretation
*** Without Image Weight
Midjourney uses the reference more loosely.
Result:
- more influence from the written style prompt
- more freedom
- less resemblance to the reference image
- more reinterpretation
** Example With Image Weight
#+begin_example
[image URL] corgi character by [artist name] --iw 2
#+end_example
** Example Without Image Weight
#+begin_example
[image URL] corgi character by [artist name]
#+end_example
** Practical Difference
With =--iw 2=:
- “make something close to this image, but in this style”
Without image weight:
- “use this image as loose inspiration, but interpret it more freely”
** When To Use High Image Weight
Use high image weight when you care about:
- pose
- shape
- layout
- composition
- specific object arrangement
** When To Avoid High Image Weight
Avoid or lower image weight when you want:
- more creative interpretation
- stronger style transformation
- more variation
- less dependence on the original image
** Reference Image Checklist [0/6]
- [ ] choose image close to desired structure
- [ ] upload image
- [ ] copy image address
- [ ] paste image URL into prompt
- [ ] add clear text instruction
- [ ] decide whether to use image weight
** Key Insight
Reference images are especially useful when words are not enough.
They help Midjourney understand what you mean visually.
** Bottom Line
Use reference images when you already have:
- a pose you like
- a composition you like
- a style direction you like
- a previous generation that is close but not perfect
Then use text prompts and image weight to guide Midjourney toward the final result.
* Transcript
#+begin_example
00:00
Okay. In this video, we are gonna talk about how
00:03
you can use reference images
00:06
to help you
00:08
quickly generate the images
00:10
that you want.
00:12
So reference images allow MidJourney
00:15
to skip a lot of,
00:17
the process
00:18
of,
00:19
creating images that don't match what you want because it
00:22
can use a reference
00:23
to help better create,
00:25
what you are looking for. So let me show you
00:27
an example of this. So I've got 2 reference images
00:31
here that I'm gonna be using as part of this
00:32
tutorial video.
00:34
Let's start out with this flower. So,
00:38
if we come here remember how earlier
00:42
we generated a bunch of minimalist
00:45
flowers.
00:47
And,
00:48
these were fine,
00:49
but they weren't quite, you know, what these ones here
00:53
looked like. Well, I've actually,
00:56
prior to this already done a lot
00:58
of generations of this. And I was able to create
01:02
a flower which was much more closer through doing through
01:05
repeating this a lot of times because that is really
01:07
what you wanna use my journey to do. You wanna
01:09
create images a lot of times. For these tutorial videos,
01:12
I only do it a couple of times.
01:15
But really, I should be doing it a lot of
01:16
different times to get a lot of different takes.
01:19
And so,
01:20
I did that for this and I got something much
01:23
closer to what I wanted.
01:25
And so,
01:26
so I got I made this through Midjourney but let's
01:28
say for example that you found this on the Internet,
01:30
you could save this.
01:31
And then what we do
01:34
is we're gonna upload it
01:37
to MidJourney.
01:39
Come and drag it in.
01:41
Click enter.
01:45
Now it has been uploaded.
01:47
So what we can do is we can click on
01:49
it
01:51
and then,
01:52
we can right click it and we can copy image
01:55
address.
01:56
And now we can go imagine
02:00
and we can paste in
02:03
the code for it.
02:05
And then we can come in and type in what
02:07
we want.
02:08
So minimalist
02:11
black line art of
02:14
a sunflower
02:15
top down on a white
02:18
background.
02:22
So now what it's doing
02:24
is it's using this
02:26
image that I uploaded
02:28
as a reference
02:30
while also
02:32
applying
02:34
my prompt request.
02:36
So,
02:38
it's not just generating different versions of this. It is
02:41
taking,
02:43
the prompt text that I gave it, but it's using
02:45
this image as a reference guide.
02:49
And we're gonna see
02:51
why that is very helpful in a minute once it
02:56
has finished,
02:57
using it
02:58
and once it has generated for us the images.
03:03
And you'll see why this can save you
03:06
a lot of time.
03:19
Almost there.
03:22
Okay.
03:23
Here is why it's so helpful.
03:25
So
03:27
you look at this
03:29
because the reference image that I gave for it through
03:32
that I had generated by doing a lot of different
03:34
generations on the journey, but again, you know, if I
03:37
found this on the internet. So this here,
03:41
it's a sun you come here.
03:44
There are no there is no stem.
03:46
There are no leaves. There's just, you know, the petals.
03:50
I managed to generate something similar to that here with
03:53
Midjourney.
03:54
Now
03:55
and I saved it.
03:57
And so you come back here. When I did it
04:00
before, when I was generating these before, a lot of
04:02
these had,
04:03
you know, had the stems, it had the leaves.
04:06
And so we were essentially kind of, you could say,
04:09
wasting time by not wasting time because it's still good
04:11
to do it, but you have to generate lots of
04:13
images. But it was frustrating because a lot of the
04:16
images we were getting were not what we wanted because
04:18
even though it was on a top down, it was
04:19
including the leads and it was including the stem. But
04:22
by adding in a reference image that doesn't have those
04:26
for my journey
04:28
to use as a reference, then it didn't generate those
04:31
for me. And instead it generated
04:34
versions of it that matched,
04:37
what I wanted so much more closely.
04:40
And so that
04:41
is how you can use reference images
04:44
to save you a lot of time.
04:46
You can also use reference images in another very fun
04:50
way too.
04:52
So
04:53
let's come and take our next image.
04:55
So this is another image that I generated earlier using
04:59
Midjourney.
05:01
A cookie. What would you expect?
05:03
Anything less from me. Absolutely
05:06
love dogs. Adore cookies.
05:10
So we now have this cookie.
05:12
We can use this as a reference
05:15
to help us get
05:17
the
05:19
type of cookie that we want, but in a particular
05:21
style.
05:22
So I've uploaded this version of a Corgi and it's
05:24
in this particular pose.
05:26
Now remember earlier,
05:27
we generated Corgis,
05:29
using Elsa,
05:31
or
05:32
I don't know if I pronounced her name right. I'm
05:34
sorry if I didn't.
05:36
And we got
05:37
what a cute little 1 with a little hat.
05:40
We got them in different poses.
05:42
We didn't specify to be fair what pose we wanted
05:44
it in. So we just got a bunch of different
05:47
poses. Well,
05:49
what we're gonna do,
05:51
click this, right click it,
05:53
copy image address,
05:57
imagine
06:01
character
06:02
by
06:13
and
06:14
we're gonna add in something else.
06:18
Image, weight,
06:19
and we're gonna do
06:21
2.
06:25
So
06:27
what we have done
06:28
is we have asked
06:30
Midjourney
06:32
to,
06:34
draw us,
06:36
a picture
06:41
using this cookie as a reference guide,
06:45
And we've asked it to do it in
06:48
the style
06:50
of,
06:51
this incredible artist.
06:54
And we've also given it an image weight of 2,
06:57
which is the maximum that you can give it right
06:59
now on the journey version 5. It could change in
07:02
different versions.
07:03
But the image weight is
07:06
us saying that we want it to look as closer
07:09
to this
07:10
as possible.
07:11
If we'd given it a lower image weight of 1
07:13
you don't have to give it an image weight, by
07:15
the way, and we'll we'll do it again without giving
07:16
it an image weight. But by giving it an image
07:19
weight,
07:20
of 2, it means then that,
07:23
Midjourney is prioritizing
07:25
making it
07:26
as close to the reference image as possible.
07:29
And so this is what we've been able to achieve.
07:32
Now, let's
07:34
come
07:35
and we'll do this again. We'll copy this.
07:38
This, by the way, is just
07:40
MidJourney,
07:41
has
07:42
URL shortened it,
07:44
which is fine. We can use the URL shortened version
07:47
of it.
07:51
And we're not gonna add an image weight.
07:56
So it's using our reference image again.
08:03
And,
08:05
this time it's got free rein
08:07
to,
08:09
use this image, but create its own,
08:12
pictures
08:13
based upon
08:15
her art style.
08:17
And you'll see that we'll get,
08:19
different results again.
08:25
Loading.
08:35
And they're gonna be quite different
08:37
and I'll explain why they're quite different.
08:41
You can already see that they're very different.
08:47
And we're almost there.
08:55
Okay. So very, very different.
09:00
This is what we got by not giving it an
09:02
image weight,
09:03
And
09:04
this is what we got by doing it.
09:07
As you can see, this is much, much closer
09:10
to our original image than this 1 here. This 1
09:14
here
09:15
takes our original image but redoes it quite substantially.
09:20
And it adds a lot more of the artist
09:23
and how she would have interpreted it,
09:28
than, this 1 here, where this 1 here takes the
09:31
image and
09:32
makes a version of it that's inspired
09:35
by her, whereas this 1 here takes more of her
09:38
art and then uses the image.
09:41
But,
09:42
but rather than you know, that's what I mean. Like,
09:44
this is focused more on the artist herself. This 1
09:47
here is focused more on the image
09:49
itself.
09:51
And so,
09:53
if you want to just see what the artist themselves
09:57
would create, then you don't have to add in an
09:59
image weight and you can do this.
10:01
Or you can do this here and you can add
10:04
in the image weight and get a very different image.
10:08
As you can see, it can save you a lot
10:10
of time because you can imagine
10:12
that if you found a pose that you like
10:16
that by adding in a reference image, then you're gonna
10:18
save a lot of time
10:20
by skipping the generation process
10:23
of,
10:25
of having to, like, find
10:27
to get images that match that pose.
10:30
You can just tell MidJourney the pose that you already
10:34
like.
10:35
So, yes,
10:37
in this video series, we're also gonna discuss how to
10:39
save these images. That's not something that I've discussed, but
10:42
it's very, very important because once you've got your image,
10:45
you then need to save it. So,
10:48
that
10:50
is the next video that I'm going to create. Whether
10:52
that's the next video you watch in the series or
10:54
not, I'm not sure. But either way, I hope that
10:57
you enjoy it and I will see you on the
10:59
next video.
#+end_example