If you want to quickly retrieve images you’ve generated with Midjourney, categorize and organize them, and save the original high-resolution files, the web interface is much more convenient than scrolling through history in Discord. This Midjourney tutorial focuses only on gallery management: how to favorite images, create collections, hide works you don’t want to display, and correctly download HD images. Follow the steps and you’ll get started right away.
Enter the Midjourney web app and sync your works
After opening the Midjourney official website, log in first. Usually you’ll be asked to authorize your Discord account so your historical jobs can be synced to your personal gallery. The first sync may take a bit of time; after refreshing, you’ll be able to see your generation history on pages like “My Images/Archive.” It’s a good idea to confirm you’re on the correct account; otherwise you might think your Midjourney images have “disappeared.”
Use Likes and Collections for “favorites” and “grouping”
In the Midjourney web app, open a single image and click the heart/Like to put it into Likes, which makes reusing prompts faster later. When you need project-based organization, use “Add to collection/收藏到合集” to create Collections, such as “E-commerce main images,” “Poster typography,” or “Character design.” The same Midjourney image can be added to multiple collections, which is great for archiving by both purpose and style.
Search and locate: use keywords to instantly find your Midjourney works
The Midjourney web app supports keyword search within your gallery. The most practical approach is to search directly for key nouns, style terms, or character names from your prompts. When looking for a series, enter from a collection first and then search—this narrows the scope and improves accuracy. If you’re used to adding project codes in your prompts (e.g., #brandA), searching in Midjourney later will save a lot of time.
The right way to download in high resolution: upscale first, then save
If you want a clearer final result, run Upscale (enlarge/enhance) on the selected image in the Midjourney web app first, then go to the single-image detail page to download. Before downloading, click the image to open it at the largest preview size, and prioritize saving the upscaled version to avoid ending up with a four-panel grid or a lower-resolution preview. For deliveries, it’s recommended to save both the image and a screenshot of the prompt, so you can recreate the same Midjourney style more easily.
Hide and archive: tuck away works you don’t want to show
If there are some Midjourney trial-and-error images you don’t want to appear on your public profile page, use “Hide” to tuck them away; afterward you can usually find them again in Archive and unhide them. For collections that are already well organized, periodically hide drafts or remove them from collections to keep Collections clean and easy to maintain. Note that hiding is not the same as deleting—Midjourney’s management approach is more like “archiving and organizing.”