The role of Camera and Director in Midjourney Images
Table of contents
For better part of a year I have been playing around with midjourney and generating images and I would like to showcase the subtle changes we can view in an image when we specify a director and camera when generating an image.
We are going to use the following directors and cameras
ARRIFLEX 435 Xtreme camera , Michael Bay
Panasonic Lumix BS1H, James Cameron
RED RANGER MONSTRO , Zack Snyder
Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL2 , Quentin Tarantino
We are going to use the following prompt
cinematic , historical photograph, realistic , mounted warrior charges across a windswept plain , shot using {CAMERA NAME} , directed by {DIRECTOR NAME} --style raw --ar 3:2
This will allow midjourney to incorporate the directors vision as best as possible , as we have not specified what way the warrior looks like and the surroundings it is up to midjourney to think of that.
Michael Bay
cinematic , historical photograph, realistic , mounted warrior charges across a windswept plain , shot using ARRIFLEX 435 Xtreme camera , directed by Michael Bay --style raw --ar 3:2
James Cameron
cinematic , historical photograph, realistic , mounted warrior charges across a windswept plain , shot using Panasonic Lumix BS1H , directed by James Cameron --style raw --ar 3:2
Zack Snyder
cinematic , historical photograph, realistic , mounted warrior charges across a windswept plain , shot using RED RANGER MONSTRO camera , directed by Zack Snyder --style raw --ar 3:2
Quentin Tarantino
cinematic , historical photography, realistic , mounted warrior charges across a windswept plain , shot using Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL2 , directed by Quentin Tarantino, high quality --style raw --ar 3:2