These are great little tips (and not just for MJ either). I used to love doing contour line drawings of faces. I could spend hours as a kid just doodling a dozen faces that sort of fit together on a page - nothing but one line and a bunch of faces, then I'd start all over and do it again. Some of those weird practice drawings came out super cool!
I think it could be cool to also do some themed weeks around projects or use cases. Midjourney prompts for arts and crafts, or product photography, or t-shirt design, etc.
Yeah I'll probably have to niche down soon. I'm trying to exhaust the pool of "generic" one-word modifiers (I did have logos, lighting, photo prompts before) but at some point if these are to continue, I'll want to tackle use cases rather than modifier types. Makes it more practical, too. Good input.
These are great little tips (and not just for MJ either). I used to love doing contour line drawings of faces. I could spend hours as a kid just doodling a dozen faces that sort of fit together on a page - nothing but one line and a bunch of faces, then I'd start all over and do it again. Some of those weird practice drawings came out super cool!
I drew a dog once. It looked like an amorphous blob. I didn't draw any more dogs.
I drew lots of blobs too! For some reason, I just kept going until they stopped looking like blobs so much.
I think it could be cool to also do some themed weeks around projects or use cases. Midjourney prompts for arts and crafts, or product photography, or t-shirt design, etc.
Yeah I'll probably have to niche down soon. I'm trying to exhaust the pool of "generic" one-word modifiers (I did have logos, lighting, photo prompts before) but at some point if these are to continue, I'll want to tackle use cases rather than modifier types. Makes it more practical, too. Good input.