Midjourney’s --stylize parameter is one of the most powerful and least understood dials. It
controls the tug-of-war between what you literally typed and Midjourney’s own trained
aesthetic. This explorer lets you scrub through the value range and see, in plain language,
what each level does — plus a recommendation based on whether your prompt is literal or artistic.
How it works
--stylize accepts an integer from 0 to 1000, defaulting to 100. The slider here snaps to
the documented checkpoints (0, 100, 250, 500, 750, 1000) and explains the behaviour at
each one:
- 0 — Almost no aesthetic overlay. The model follows your words very literally. Best for technical accuracy.
- 100 (default) — A light, balanced touch of Midjourney’s style. Good general-purpose setting.
- 250 — Noticeably more artistic colour and composition while still respecting your prompt.
- 500 — Midjourney starts making bold choices; details you did not specify get filled in attractively.
- 750 — Strongly stylised. Great for posters and mood pieces, but literal accuracy slips.
- 1000 — Maximum aesthetic. The model prioritises beauty over fidelity to your exact words.
The tool then weighs your prompt type (literal vs. artistic) against the chosen value and tells you whether you are in the sweet spot or pushing too far in one direction.
Tips and notes
- Stylize is free. It does not change render time or GPU cost, so experiment without worry.
- Pair with chaos, not against it.
--stylizecontrols how artistic, while--chaoscontrols how varied the four results are. They are independent dials. - Logos and diagrams: go low. Anything where added flourishes are a bug, not a feature, wants
--stylize 0to50. - Test, then commit. A quick comparison at
100,250, and750for the same prompt usually reveals which level matches your intent before you settle in.