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Midjourney Moodboards and Personalized Upgrades Explained: Lock in Your Brand Style Faster

3/5/2026
Gemini

Recently, Midjourney has made “style control” more granular: Moodboards and personalization have been strengthened at the same time, and browsing and managing on the web has become smoother. For users creating brand assets, posters, and long-running series images, the biggest change is that it’s now easier to consistently generate the same overall feel.

Moodboards: Turn reference images into the foundation of your style

The core of Midjourney’s new Moodboards feature is “set the tone first, then generate.” You can upload a group of reference images (such as key visuals for the same brand, photography in the same color family, materials with the same texture) so that Midjourney stays closer to this visual language when generating.

In practice, it’s best not to be greedy with the number of references—start with 8–20 images to cover color, lighting, composition, and materials. Then run different copy with the same moodboard, and you’ll find Midjourney’s style drift becomes noticeably smaller, making it easier to produce a cohesive series.

Personalization improvements: Better understanding your go-to aesthetic choices

Personalization isn’t about “making images busier”; it’s about bringing Midjourney closer to the visual tendencies you consistently choose over time. It’s better suited to teams with a fixed aesthetic, e-commerce imagery for a fixed category, or content accounts that need a long-term unified tone.

It’s recommended to first stabilize output for a while using the same type of prompts, then enable personalization to align with your “usual preferences.” When you need to step outside your comfort zone, remember to temporarily switch back to more neutral settings to avoid Midjourney pulling everything into the same style.

Web experience upgrade: Less time spent finding, reviewing, and reusing

Browsing “My Images” on Midjourney’s web version now feels more like a stock library: after opening a single image, you can use the scroll wheel to browse continuously and quickly, and filtering and reviewing are much more efficient. For people who need to sift through a large number of options every day, this is more practical than digging through chat logs.

In your workflow, you can store the reference images used for “locking the style” into moodboards, then quickly review generated results on the web, pick a satisfactory version, and continue upscaling or fine-tuning. Midjourney now feels more like a complete tool for management and reuse, not just an image-generation entry point.

About V6.1 and what’s next: More stable image quality; V7 and video are worth watching

Based on publicly available information, Midjourney’s V6.1 phase focuses on improving image quality, aesthetic consistency, and text rendering, while also pushing a stronger personalization experience. Some capabilities—such as partial upscaling, editing, and re-texturing—still work in conjunction with existing model strategies, and the team has mentioned gradually moving capabilities into the next-generation version.

If you’re waiting for “more stable character/object reference” or more complete dynamic content capabilities, keep an eye on Midjourney’s previews and signals around V7 and video. For commercial creation, these changes mean that sustained output for the same IP and batch generation in the same style will become increasingly controllable.

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