In Midjourney, Dan McPharlin's name evokes distant sci-fi cities on faraway desert planes. This context transcends most other generations in McPharlin's style, too. His Nazgul and Chernobog look like they have come out of the pages of a space fiction comic book. His peonies decay amidst an otherworldy wasteland—next to a bioarchitecture building with a retro-futuristic vibe. The style of McPharlin's illustrations—a wide range of warm-hued colors, flat solid shapes and gradients, and clean lines—is excellent with even non-sci-fi prompts. Just look at Thom Yorke! The only prompt that remained impenetrable for McPharlin's style is the cute Mainecoon cat (although even the cat came out slightly extraterrastrial ^___^).
All samples are produced by Midlibrary team using Midjourney AI (if not stated otherwise). Naturally, they are not representative of real artists' works/real-world prototypes.
Ver. 2.9.1
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Midlibrary Benchmark is a test comprised of nine standardized prompts designed to test how Midjounrey styles (AKA artistic styles, reference styles, or style modifiers) work with different subjects in a variety of contexts.
Depending on how a style manifested itself with each prompt, we add 1, 0.5, or 0 points to its total score.
The prompt produced a generic results with no unique style features: this test adds nothing (0) to the overall score.
This generation inherits more elements from the referenced style, but they are scarce and dilluted. Which adds 0.5 to the style's score.
In this case, the Midjourney style showed a distinct and unique result, well aligned with the style's real-world prototype. A firm 1.