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HomeTips & TricksChatGPTMidjourney Web: A Quick Start Guide to the New Create Entry Point and Favorites Feature

Midjourney Web: A Quick Start Guide to the New Create Entry Point and Favorites Feature

2/15/2026
ChatGPT

Midjourney has recently made both “creating” and “managing” much smoother: you can now generate images directly on the web, and there’s a more practical way to organize favorites. Below, following the real operating flow, I’ll clearly explain how to use this new batch of features and how to pair them with your existing workflow.

Generate images directly with Midjourney on the web: no need to take an extra detour

After opening the Midjourney official website and logging in, you’ll find the web version is no longer just for “viewing images”—you can start creating right away. Enter the creation page, type your prompt in the input box, and you can launch a generation. The results will be recorded in your personal gallery by task, alongside your previous Midjourney works.

If you’re used to testing prompts in Discord, the web version is better suited for “finalizing”: move over the prompts you’ve already validated and manage your generation records in one place. The benefit is that creating, viewing, and selecting in Midjourney can all be done within a single interface, making it faster to review later.

Favorites go live: turn the Midjourney gallery from “image piling” into “image curation”

Favorites are a highly practical organizational feature: when you see an image you like, add it to favorites, then group it by project, client, or style. For people who often create series, this is far more convenient than downloading locally and creating folders—especially when you’re iterating repeatedly on the same visual style in Midjourney.

It’s recommended to create at least three categories: inspiration references, deliverable finals, and reusable styles. That way, the next time you open Midjourney, you won’t have to scroll forever to find “that one that felt right last time.”

Use old images to back-infer new ones: make Midjourney outputs more consistent

What’s smoother about the web version is the “look—pick—regenerate” loop: you can first filter in the gallery to a certain style or project, then choose the image closest to your target from favorites, and return to the creation input box to refine the description. Output consistency in Midjourney often comes from a clear style anchor, rather than writing an extremely long prompt all at once.

A practical way to write prompts is: first use one sentence to lock in the subject and scene, then add two to three lines to supplement camera, lighting, and materials. You’ll find Midjourney is more likely to converge toward your intent, rather than diverging into “all four are good, but none are usable.”

Quick tips to get started: use the web version to shorten your Midjourney workflow

Step one: turn your commonly used prompts into your own “templates,” changing only the subject and style keywords each time. Step two: use favorites to accumulate reusable examples. Step three: treat the web version as your finalization zone to reduce switching back and forth between multiple windows. The core value of this update is essentially a shorter creation chain and lower review cost.

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