Midjourney Color Palettes: The Manual vs. Outpainting Method

<p>A color palette is a grouping of colors used or appearing in an image.</p> <p>It is helpful for designers to use as a visual reference. Suppose you created a beautiful image in Midjourney and want to use it as the main element in your invitation card; you can use the image&rsquo;s color palette to color the font, border, and other supporting elements to create a theme.</p> <p>Although &ldquo;color palette&rdquo; and &ldquo;color scheme&rdquo; are frequently used interchangeably, they differ. I won&rsquo;t discuss the difference in this article because I want to keep things simple.</p> <p>Midjourney (MJ) can create color palettes/schemes that inspire you to make other works of art. Its current version (as of today) provides only limited control over the colors used to create images. For example, you cannot specify the Hexcode or Pentone colors when creating an image. There&rsquo;s more to say about the colors in MJ, but that&rsquo;s for another day.</p> <p>There are two ways to create a color palette. But both of them are not 100% reliable or consistent. Color control is quite limited in MJ, but we can still make it work to create a color palette. It&rsquo;s also fun to create one for&nbsp;<em>quick&nbsp;</em>color reference.</p> <p><a href="https://bootcamp.uxdesign.cc/midjourney-color-palettes-the-manual-vs-outpainting-method-91eef4e999a8"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>