Merge worlds with Prompter Mag! 📷 For just $5/mo (or only $30/yr!), dive into the art of double exposure where Midjourney trigger tokens, keywords and prompts blend two realms into one. Each text-to-image creation is a seamless fusion, capturing the essence of multiple perspectives in a single, breathtaking image.
👇 Renders + prompts after the Keywords 👇
If you didn’t hear, Niji 6 is out for Alpha testing 📣
To show off its flexibility, I picked Double Exposure as the target style, and keep in mind, double exposure is a Photography trick, something that a Niji model would not boast as its strong suit, however, it handled it like a champ, and I actually liked the generations better than with the V6 model.
To try it, add --niji 6
to the end of your prompt.
This new Niji model is highly stylized, if your generations are coming out too abstract or different than what you’re used to with Niji 5, add the --style raw
parameter at the end of your prompt to tone down the new style a bit.
Side Note:
You may notice I basically only used one prompt structure for this entire issue, this is NOT the only structure that works, but i’ve been testing different ways of prompting V6 and this is a short structure I’m currently testing and I like the results a lot, not only with this style but applied to all kinds of other V6 prompts:
a [keyword] [medium] of a [subject 1] and a [subject 2] --v 6
Also, as you read through the prompts of the generations below, you’ll notice I’ve only used one set of style keywords “double exposure”, but the other 8 trigger tokens listed below will give you some epic results as well. You’ll have to try them for yourself, just swap them out or pile them on at the end to emphasize the style as you would with a V5 tag-style prompt like this:
a [keyword] [medium] of a [subject 1] and a [subject 2], [keyword], [keyword], [keyword] --v 6
FYI:
keyword = any of the validated keywords below
medium = photo, illustration, movie poster, film still, image, magazine cover, etc.
subject = crow, pirate, space cowboy, nebula, etc.
Double Exposure is a photographic technique that combines two different images into a single photo, creating a composite image that offers a surreal, dreamlike, or ethereal quality. This effect can be achieved either in-camera, traditionally with film, or through digital photo editing software. This technique layers two or more exposures to create a single image. Originally a feature of film photography, digital advancements now allow photographers to achieve this effect with greater control in post-production. Double Exposure can convey complex emotions, juxtapose ideas, or blend landscapes with portraits for symbolic meanings.
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