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Organizing Workflow
Three Image States
1. Exploration
Loose experimentation. Prompt testing, style tests, weird ideas.
2. Candidate
An image worth refining. You might upscale, remix, or edit it.
3. Final
Something worth exporting, archiving, post-processing, or using in a project.
A simple workflow becomes:
Explore → Select → Refine → Finalize
Inside Midjourney, the key is to separate exploration noise from meaningful candidates.
Use the “Like” System Aggressively
Treat it as your first filter pass.
When reviewing a grid:
- Ignore most results
- Heart anything with potential
- Not only perfect images
Your workflow becomes:
All generations → Liked images → Refinement work
Later you can simply open: Organize → Likes
Now you are browsing only the good seeds instead of the chaos.
Think of Likes as your creative shortlist.
Use “Organize” Like a Working Table
Midjourney’s Organize tab lets you filter:
- Liked
- Upscaled
- Variations
- Generated images
This is extremely useful if you adopt a habit:
Upscale only images that enter the “Candidate” phase.
That means:
- Exploration → generate grids
- Candidate → upscale
- Refinement → remix / vary
- Final → export
Then Upscaled images automatically become your shortlist.
Filtering by Upscaled becomes almost like a portfolio view.
Always Work From One “Seed Image”
A common beginner mistake is jumping prompts constantly.
Instead:
- Generate a grid
- Pick the strongest image
- Build from it
Workflow:
- Draft → Pick best composition
- Vary/Remix Strong → If re-seed is needed on the draft
- Vary Subtle → Explore undirected variations
- Remix → Explore directed variations
- Editor → Surgically regenerate parts
- Upscale → Add detail and create high resolution “hero”
This creates image families instead of random outputs.
Don’t Upscale Too Early
Upscaling everything creates clutter and consumes credits.
Rule of thumb:
Grid → shortlist → upscale only the best
Use Prompt Comments in the Prompt Bar
Midjourney lets you add text that doesn't affect generation if you use separators.
Example:
forest shrine at dusk, cinematic lighting --ar 3:2 // exploration phase forest shrine at dusk, cinematic lighting --ar 3:2 // fairy version test
This way the prompt itself becomes documentation when browsing later.
Maintain One “Hero Image”
For each exploration session, try to end with:
one hero image
That’s the one you:
refine
upscale
export
archive
If you create 50 images but only 3 heroes, your archive stays clean.
Weekly “Creative Garbage Collection”
Once a week:
Open Likes and ask:
still interesting?
worth refining?
Remove likes from anything that no longer excites you.
This keeps your shortlist alive.
A Simple MJ Workflow Blueprint 1. Exploration
generate grids
2. First filter
heart interesting images
3. Candidate phase
upscale promising ones
4. Refinement
vary / remix / editor
5. Final
hero image selected
Inside MJ, this keeps the system manageable even with thousands of generations.
Next Step (Very Important)
Once the MJ side is clear, the real power move is the download and archive workflow.
Because the real chaos begins when you have:
MJ exports Photoshop edits Upscaled versions Prompt notes
I can show you a very clean professional archive structure used by concept artists and AI creators that makes thousands of images easy to navigate.
It includes:
naming conventions
folder structure
prompt storage
versioning
post-processing pipeline
And it pairs extremely well with Midjourney.
If you'd like, we can build that system next. It becomes your personal AI image studio pipeline. 🎨