Midjourney has recently refined “personalization” even further: it doesn’t just generate images—it understands your aesthetics better. Beyond uploading images for editing, Midjourney is also speeding up the personalization setup process and supports multiple personalized profiles linked with web-side quick commands, making everyday image generation more consistent and requiring fewer steps.
Upload Image Editing: Hand Existing Assets to Midjourney for Further Refinement
In the past, you mostly “generated from scratch” in Midjourney; now you can upload your own images into the image editor to keep refining them. You can retouch details on top of the original, do partial inpainting, or layer in Midjourney’s stylistic preferences to make the final output fit a brand or personal project more closely.
This kind of editing is best suited to three scenarios: fine-tuning e-commerce hero images, unifying facial expressions and outfits for people, and rapidly iterating on poster layouts. For those who already have an asset library, Midjourney’s value is no longer “replacing a photoshoot,” but “speeding up post-production and style unification.”
Faster Personalization Setup: Use “Rank Images” to Teach Midjourney Your Taste
Midjourney’s personalization entry is the “Personalize” button in the sidebar. The core action is choosing preferences/ranking among a set of images. The more clearly you choose, the easier it is for Midjourney to converge on the composition, color, and texture you like, reducing the kind of rework where it “looks good but isn’t what you wanted.”
In practice, don’t try to do too much at once: first complete one round of preference training with a clear direction—such as “clean commercial photography” or “retro illustration.” After Midjourney stabilizes, expand to a second direction to avoid conflicting aesthetic signals.
Multiple Personalized Profiles: Switch Between Different Style “Workbenches” Under One Account
The point of multiple personalized profiles is to let Midjourney prepare different taste “presets” for different tasks. For example, you can create one for realistic landscapes, one for character illustration, and even one dedicated to a unified color palette and lighting for brand key visuals.


