If you want to organize images generated by Midjourney, be able to download the original images at any time, or reuse prompts, the easiest way is to use the personal gallery on the Midjourney website. This article walks through the real workflow in order: how to log in, how to favorite and search, how to correctly download high-resolution images, and how to reuse Midjourney prompts and parameters with one click for further iteration.
Enter the Midjourney website and open your personal gallery
After opening the official Midjourney site in your browser, clicking Log in usually redirects you to Discord for authorization—this is the most common entry point in Midjourney’s account system. After authorization, return to the web app and go to your personal page/gallery (you can generally see your generation history arranged by time). If you find the gallery empty, first confirm you’re logged into the same Discord account, because Midjourney works are bound to the logged-in identity.
Use “Favorite/Like” to quickly build a reusable list
When managing works on the Midjourney website, the most practical thing is to “Like/Favorite” images you’re satisfied with (commonly via a heart button), so you can view them together on the Favorites page later. The benefit is that even if you generate a lot of iterations, you won’t worry about them being pushed away by newer works. It’s recommended to favorite them in three categories: “commercial-ready finals,” “drafts worth refining,” and “reusable styles.” This will make it much faster to recover inspiration in Midjourney later.
Search and locate: use keywords to dig up your Midjourney history
Once your volume of generations increases, the Midjourney gallery becomes more like an asset warehouse, and search capability becomes critical. Prioritize searching with distinctive words from your original prompt (style names, subject names, lens terms); it saves more time than scrolling only by date. After you find a particular image, it’s a good idea to favorite it right away to avoid repeating “archaeology” in Midjourney next time.
Download high-resolution images correctly: avoid saving only the small preview
When downloading, don’t just right-click and save the thumbnail in the list, as you may end up with a low-resolution preview. A more reliable approach is to open the details page for a single work on the Midjourney website, then use the download entry on the page, or open the original image first and then save it. If you need different versions (such as an upscaled image or a variant), first confirm in Midjourney that what you’re downloading is the final image corresponding to the exact one you want.
Reuse prompts and parameters: turn successful cases into templates
Midjourney’s most valuable asset is often not the image itself, but “how this image was produced.” After you find the prompt content in the work details, copy it as a template, then for new needs change only the subject, scene, or lighting terms while keeping the effective parameters (such as aspect ratio and style-related settings). It’s recommended to add a line of personal notes to commonly used templates, such as “good for e-commerce white background” or “good for cinematic portraits,” so it’s smoother to reuse next time in Midjourney.