AI Art Prompts


How to Write Better AI Image Prompts — Without the Guesswork
A practical guide for complete beginners: what the AI actually reads, what you’re getting wrong, and how to fix it with Midjourney, DALL-E, and Stable Diffusion
The Short Version
Most beginners type what they want and get what the AI expects — which is the most generic version of their request imaginable. The fix isn’t more words. It’s the right words in the right order: subject → style → lighting → mood.
Which tool? If you’ve never done this before: start with DALL-E via ChatGPT (free, no setup, conversational). When you’re ready to level up quality: Midjourney ($10/mo, steeper curve, far better results). Stable Diffusion is free but requires technical setup — not for day one.
Your first AI-generated image probably looked fine. Maybe even impressive. Then you tried to get something specific — a particular mood, a precise composition, a scene that matched what you actually had in mind — and the results went off the rails. The cat had seven toes. The background was something you never asked for. The “dramatic lighting” was just noon sunlight.
That gap between what you typed and what you got is not a bug. It’s the fundamental mechanic of how these systems work. AI image generators don’t read your prompt like a person reads a sentence. They treat your words as probability signals, filling every unspecified detail with the statistical average of their training data. Type “a forest” and you get the most generic forest ever committed to pixels: green, midday lit, vaguely European-looking, probably with a path running through it.
This guide explains how to stop that from happening.
First: Which Tool Are You Using? (It Changes Everything)
Before a single prompt tip matters, you need to understand that these tools speak different languages. What works in Midjourney actively breaks in Stable Diffusion. What DALL-E loves, Midjourney ignores. Beginners who copy prompts from one platform to another and wonder why results look nothing alike are hitting this problem.
| Tool | Prompt Style | Ease for Beginners | Free Option? | Paid Price | Best At |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DALL-E / GPT Image | Natural sentences — describe it like you’re talking to someone | Easiest | Yes (limited via Bing) | $20/mo (ChatGPT Plus) | Text in images, accessible interface, iterative edits |
| Midjourney V7 | Short, punchy phrases — comma-separated visual keywords | Medium | No (removed late 2024) | $10/mo Basic | Aesthetic quality, cinematic images, artistic styles |
| Stable Diffusion 3.5 | Keyword-weighted lists with negative prompts | Hardest | Yes (self-hosted, needs GPU) | Free (own hardware) or ~$0.03–0.05/image via API | Full control, customization, fine-tuning |
Pricing verified April 2026. Midjourney removed its free trial in late 2024 — the $10/month Basic plan is now the entry point. DALL-E 3 was replaced by GPT Image 1.5 in December 2025; users on ChatGPT see this automatically. Sources: Midjourney pricing breakdown, Neuronad comparison, April 2026.
The Anatomy of a Good Prompt
A prompt that gets results isn’t longer — it’s more specific in the right dimensions. There are six things a good prompt defines. Leave one out and the AI fills it with its average.
Notice what that prompt doesn’t do: it doesn’t ramble. It doesn’t say “beautiful” or “stunning” or “amazing” — those words mean nothing to the model. It specifies the actual visual information: who, in what medium, under what light, with what feeling, from what angle.
The Six Things That Actually Change Your Output
1. Your Subject — Be Annoyingly Specific
The single fastest improvement any beginner makes: stop describing what you want, start describing what it looks like. “A cat” gives you average cat. “A tabby cat with amber eyes, slightly matted fur, crouched on a fire escape railing” gives you a cat with a story.
The AI fills in everything: generic age, generic race, generic expression, studio background, flat lighting. You get someone’s average.
Now the model has a person, not a placeholder. Every detail you give takes a decision away from the AI.
2. Style — Name the Medium, Not the Adjective
“Beautiful” tells the AI nothing. “Watercolor illustration” tells it everything. AI models understand artistic mediums, movements, and eras far better than they understand vague quality words. Try: oil painting, pencil sketch, digital illustration, Studio Ghibli anime, 1970s travel poster, isometric pixel art, editorial photography, film noir cinematography.
“Beautiful” and “fantasy” are both statistically average. The result will look like every generic AI landscape you’ve seen.
Now the model has a clear visual reference for what “fantasy” means in this context.
3. Lighting — The Most Underused Lever
Lighting is what separates a flat image from one that feels real. Most beginners skip it entirely. Don’t. Here are the ones worth adding to your vocabulary:
4. Composition — Tell It Where to Stand
These are real photography terms that AI models trained on billions of images understand immediately. Use them.
Camera distance: close-up, medium shot, wide shot, establishing shot, extreme close-up. Camera angle: eye-level, low angle looking up, bird’s eye view, Dutch angle (tilted, creates unease), over-the-shoulder shot. Composition rules: rule of thirds, centered symmetry, leading lines, negative space.
5. Mood — Atmosphere Over Adjectives
Don’t say “dramatic.” Describe what makes it dramatic. “Dramatic” could mean a thunderstorm, a courtroom, a theatrical spotlight, or a battle. Instead, try: tense silence, melancholic, ethereal and dreamlike, unsettling quiet, joyful chaos, nostalgic warmth, stark and clinical. Pair mood words with environment details that reinforce them.
6. What to Exclude — Negative Prompts
Negative prompts are how you stop the AI from adding things you didn’t ask for. Midjourney uses --no at the end of your prompt. Stable Diffusion has a dedicated negative prompt field. DALL-E doesn’t use negative prompts the same way — instead, you say “without X” in your description.
Common negatives that almost always help: blurry, watermark, text, extra limbs, low quality, flat lighting.
ChatGPT’s image generation understands natural language exclusions — just say it like a person would.
The Four Mistakes Beginners Make Most Often
These are the specific failure patterns that show up again and again. If your results are frustrating, one of these is probably why.
Mistake 1: Prompt Overload
Packing fifteen concepts into one prompt doesn’t produce an image with fifteen things. It produces a confused mess where the AI averages them all into visual noise. Multiple independent tests confirm: “I’ve had better results with 15 well-chosen words than with 50 random ones.” One strong scene beats five weak ideas stitched together.
The fix: pick one thing your image is about. Everything else serves that one thing.
Mistake 2: Mixing Styles Accidentally
Saying “photorealistic watercolor illustration with digital art vibes” is like asking for coffee that tastes like tea. These styles actively conflict. The model will split the difference into something that looks like neither. PromptIt’s 2026 guide flags this as one of the most common causes of generic-looking output from otherwise detailed prompts. Choose one medium and commit to it.
Mistake 3: Fighting the Tool’s Strengths
Midjourney is not designed for images containing readable text — logos, signs, book covers with legible titles. Ask it for that and you get garbled letter-soup. DALL-E’s GPT Image generation handles text far better. Similarly, Midjourney’s randomness is a feature when you’re exploring; it’s frustrating when you need exact control. Matching the tool to the task matters more than prompt skill.
Mistake 4: One Prompt, One Chance
This is the mindset that kills progress fastest. You type a prompt, get four results, none match what you wanted, you give up. But AI image generation is iterative. Every generation gives you information. Did it get the lighting right but the subject wrong? Now you know to keep the lighting keywords and revise the subject. Midjourney’s Vary and Remix modes let you build on outputs rather than starting from scratch each time. Treat the first generation as a draft, not a verdict.
Your First Prompt, Step by Step
If you’ve never done this before, here’s exactly how to build your first real prompt from scratch — not a template to copy, but a process to understand.
“Midjourney rewards clarity and creative direction more than technical complexity.”
— Covefox AI Guide, February 2026
What the Tools Cost — Honestly
The original article this guide replaces contained completely invented pricing for tools that don’t exist. Here’s what’s real as of April 2026.
DALL-E / GPT Image via ChatGPT: Free image generation is available through Bing’s Image Creator. The ChatGPT Plus plan at $20/month gives you more images and access to the latest GPT Image 1.5 model with conversational editing. If you already pay for ChatGPT Plus, you’re already using this.
Midjourney: Basic plan at $10/month gives approximately 200 images in Fast mode. Standard at $30/month adds unlimited Relax mode — effectively unlimited slower images plus a bank of fast ones for deadline work. 80% of users who aren’t running professional volume are on Standard. There is no free tier.
Stable Diffusion: Free to run locally on your own hardware. Requires a capable GPU (roughly $400+ for decent results) and comfort with technical setup. Not a beginner’s starting point. Via hosted APIs: approximately $0.03–0.05 per image depending on provider and model version.
The prompt is not magic. It’s the conversation you have with a model that thinks in probabilities, not intentions. Every word you add is a constraint that narrows those probabilities toward what you actually want. Every word you leave out is a gap the model fills with its average.
Subject + style + lighting + mood. That four-part formula, applied consistently, will get you better results in your next ten generations than any list of “100 magic prompt words” you’ll find anywhere online. The words aren’t magic. The specificity is.
Start with DALL-E because it’s free and forgiving. Move to Midjourney when you find yourself hitting its ceiling — and you will. And iterate every time, because the first result is always a conversation starter, never a finished answer.
Sources: Tool pricing verified April 2026 from official platform pages and independent analysis: Midjourney pricing breakdown (PxlPeak), Midjourney vs DALL-E comparison (Neuronad, April 2026), AI image generation cost breakdown (Apatero, February 2026). Prompt technique informed by: PromptIt guide (2026), LetsEnhance prompt guide, PromptBuilder 2026 tips. No affiliate relationships with any tools mentioned.
From the BestPrompt.Art Community
This guide covers the mechanics of prompt construction. The forum threads below show what those mechanics produce in practice—real outputs, real failures, and real iterations:
What’s Your Go-To Prompt for Creating Realistic Portraits? The “subject specificity” principle from this guide—describing what someone looks like rather than asking for “a nice portrait”—is exactly what this thread documents. Community members share the specific descriptor combinations that produce consistent facial structure, skin texture, and expression control across Midjourney, DALL-E, and Stable Diffusion.
How Do You Describe Your Art Style in a Prompt? The style-layer advice in this post—naming the medium rather than using vague adjectives—is the core technique this thread explores. Members test “watercolor illustration” vs. “beautiful art” vs. “stunning masterpiece” and post the results. The variance is instructive and immediate.
Weirdest AI Art Results: Share Your Funniest Fails! The “Mistake 3: Fighting the Tool’s Strengths” section—hands, text, and anatomy—is a running theme in this thread. The failures are cataloged with the prompts that produced them, which is the fastest way to learn what each tool actually can’t do, regardless of prompt skill.
Best Prompts for Surreal and Dreamlike Art Mood and atmosphere control—the fifth layer in the anatomy breakdown—is where surreal art lives or dies. This thread surfaces which mood phrases produce coherent, dreamlike output and which collapse into visual noise. The “one mood phrase” rule from this post is particularly relevant here.
Creating Fantasy Worlds: Share Your Best World-Building Prompts. The composition and lighting advice in this guide—establishing shots, golden hour, and rim lighting—is how you make a world feel inhabited rather than illustrated. This thread contains the long-form prompts that maintain visual consistency across multiple scenes, which is the advanced application of the six-layer structure.
https://www.bestprompt.art/blog-2/




