Frederick Cayley Robinson (1862-1927) was a British painter and illustrator, renowned for his distinctive, ethereal works that often convey a sense of tranquility and introspective calm. Robinson’s style is marked by its use of soft colors, delicate compositions, and a profound sense of narrative, often infused with symbolic and allegorical elements. Did you know? One of Cayley Robinson’s most celebrated works is the series of four paintings titled «Acts of Mercy,» commissioned by the Middlesex Hospital in London. These paintings, completed between 1915 and 1920, depict scenes of care and compassion in a style that combines realism with a dream-like serenity, reflecting Robinson’s interest in spiritual and humanitarian themes. Robinson’s legacy is also notable for his contributions to book illustration and theater design, where his keen sense of atmosphere and ability to convey emotion through visual imagery were highly acclaimed. A very powerful style with its own rules of composition, color scheme, interpretation of our subjects and overall atmosphere of serenity and calmness. Check out the lovely sleeping cat, Francis’s twin brother, gothic city full of light, the beautiful dying peonies, and fall in love with this style right away! The Midlibrary score is 9/9!
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
♡
We do our best to keep this website running as smoothly as possible. However, stuff happens, and we thank you for letting us know!
We regularly publish new Midjourney Guides, compile new Style Tops, update the website, and have fun! Want to be the first to get Midlibrary news? Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss a thing!
Personal Libraries are available to our Patreon Community
Learn more about the benefits of supporting us by becoming Midlibrary Patron—and start your Personal Library ↗︎
You have just become a Patron, and cannot log in?
Please, allow our team some time (usually not more than 24 hours) to set up your Personal Library.
You may be using different emails for your Patreon and Discord accounts. If that is the case, please, send your Discord email to community@midlibrary.io.
If the issue perists, or you didn't get a response to your email, please, inform us via Bug Report form
We are currently updating the Personal Libraires' infrastructure
In the nearest future, it will allow you to access your Collections much quicker, add covers to them, tag the styles you save to quickly find them, and—most importantly—save your --sref (numerical) styles!
However, at the moment, logging in to your Library is unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience. If you are a Midlibrary Patron, please, check this Patreon post ↗︎ for Personal Libraries status updates.
To start creating Collections and save favorite styles:
Log in with Discord →Learn more about Personal Style Libraries, saving favorite styles, and organizing them into Collections.
Learn more about supporting Midlibrary and the benefits of joining our Patreon community →
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.