To realize the full potential of AI art generators such as Dream Studio, Midjourney, Picsart. Dall-e, and more, it is essential to articulate input requests accurately. Even though these programs create brilliant artwork with minimal input, inadequate query formulation can cause the image produced to be less than ideal. If you’d like to be successful in designing AI-generated art, there are some tips and suggestions that may be beneficial. It is important to come up with a clear, precise prompt to make sure the output is sophisticated. However, if the prompt is too vague, the resulting artwork may lack detail and be disorganized.






To create a good prompt, there are a few key elements that you should include:
Raw or Core Prompt
The main object, category, or individual in your prompt can be concisely described as follows:
- Cat
- Landscape
- Texture
- A warrior
A raw prompt can be seen as the foundation of your idea. AI technology uses this information to construct artwork. Without extra guidelines, a raw prompt often results in an abstract and unpredictable image. To create a less chaotic outcome, it’s helpful to provide a few more specifics.
Art Medium
When you add a different art medium to your text-to-image generator, the results can look different. Give it a try and check out what each medium offers, like drawing, pencil, ink, pastels and chalk, digital art, or oil painting. You never know what you might discover!
These artistic mediums are feasible for selection: Acrylic, Airbrush, Assemblage, Collage, Charcoal, Color Pencil, Digital, Encaustic, Etching, Fabric, Gouache, Graphite, Ink, Installation, Jewelry, Oil, Pastel, Pen and Ink, Pencil, Photography, Printmaking, Mixed Media, Mosaic, Watercolor, Pen and Wash, Performance, Recycled Materials, Sculpture, Stencil, Tapestry, Video, Wood.
Art style
You can also employ visual art styles such as Abstract Expressionism, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Avant-garde, Baroque, Bauhaus, Classicism, CoBrA, Color Field Painting, Conceptual Art, Constructivism, Cubism, Dadaism, Digital Art, Expressionism, Fauvism, Futurism, the Harlem Renaissance, Impressionism, Installation Art, Land Art, Minimalism, Neo-Impressionism, Neoclassicism, Neon Art, Op Art, Performance Art, Pop Art, Post-Impressionism, Precisionism, Rococo, Street Art, Surrealism, Suprematism, Symbolism, and the Zero Group.
Using Artists styles
To create a distinct style and promote a cohesive composition, you may wish to identify a specific artist or several artists as your point of reference. For example, if you desire an image heavily influenced by abstract elements, you could ask for something “inspired by Pablo Picasso” or just “Picasso”.
Here is a compilation (divided by medium) of non-living artists to help refine your concept; however, further research of your own is recommended to fully explore different styles, techniques, and artworks.
Portraitists can include John Singer Sargent, Edgar Degas, Paul Cézanne, and Jan van Eyck.
Oil painters can include Leonardo DaVinci, Vincent Van Gogh, Johannes Vermeer, and Rembrandt. Pen/Pencil illustrators comprise Albrecht Dürer, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres.
Landscape painters can include Thomas Moran, Claude Monet, Alfred Bierstadt, and Frederic Edwin Church.
More details:
For a professional look, consider the following keywords: intricate, surrealistic work popular on ArtStation, a triadic color palette, smooth and sharp visuals, matte and elegant illustrations, digitally painted elements, deep and gloomy shades, Octane Render renderings, 8K and 4K resolutions, subtle washed-out colors, boldly-defined lighting, picturesque post-processing, imaginatively-crafted ambient lighting, and an epic composition – all of which make the perfect final touch.