My Testing Setup
I used Midjourney V7 (midjourney.com, Standard plan at $30/mo for this project — volume was too high for Basic) over five weeks across six product photo projects: lifestyle context images, background replacement concepts, packaging mockups, and mood-board style reference images for briefing photographers.
Some outputs went live in ads. Others were used internally. A few were scrapped entirely.
Two specific examples: I generated 12 lifestyle context images showing a skincare product in a bathroom setting — no actual product in the image, just the environment and mood — and used them as ad backgrounds with the real product composited in afterward. Results were strong. I also tried to generate images of the actual product itself from reference photos. That failed in ways I will explain.
Pricing: Standard plan at $30/mo. For product photo work at volume, Basic at $10/mo runs out fast. Budget for Standard if this is a regular workflow.
1. Lifestyle Context and Environment Images
This is where Midjourney V7 earns its place in a product photo workflow. Generating the environment — a kitchen countertop, a gym bag, a coffee shop table — without needing to stage or shoot it is genuinely useful.
I needed eight lifestyle backgrounds for a supplement brand's ad campaign. Real location shoots for eight setups would have cost $3,000 and taken two weeks. I generated the environments in Midjourney, exported them, and composited the real product in using Photoshop. Total cost: $30 for the month's Midjourney subscription and four hours of compositing work.
The images ran in paid Meta ads for six weeks. CTR was in line with our studio-shot creative. Nobody asked if the backgrounds were AI-generated.
The key: generate the environment only. Do not try to put your specific product into the Midjourney image. Composite it in post. That division of labor is where the workflow holds up.
2. Packaging Mockups for Concepts That Do Not Exist Yet
Before you manufacture a product or print packaging, you need to see what it looks like. Midjourney V7 is fast and cheap for early-stage packaging concepts.
I used it to generate six packaging directions for a new product line before committing to a designer. Described the product category, target aesthetic, and color palette. Got six distinct visual directions in 40 minutes. Brought them to a brand review meeting instead of blank slides.
The output is not production-ready. It is concept-ready. The proportions will be wrong, the text will be garbled, and the structural details will not survive a print spec. But as a way to align on visual direction before spending money on a designer, it saves two rounds of revisions and a lot of confused briefing calls.
3. Reference Images for Briefing Photographers
This is an underrated use case. Midjourney makes it easy to show a photographer exactly what you mean instead of describing it in words.
I needed to brief a photographer on a specific mood for a product shoot — raw linen textures, natural light, Scandinavian minimal aesthetic, muted palette. I generated eight reference images in Midjourney and sent them alongside the written brief. The photographer responded in 20 minutes with "got it, I know exactly what you want."
The shoot came back on brief on the first try. That has never happened before without at least one round of reshoots. Midjourney did not replace the photographer. It made the photographer's job easier and my brief clearer.
4. How It Compares to Traditional Stock Photography
Stock photography gives you real photos of real objects. Midjourney gives you generated images that can be customized to a specific mood, palette, and composition.
For generic lifestyle contexts — a person using a laptop, a coffee cup on a desk — stock is faster and cheaper. For a specific aesthetic that does not exist in stock libraries, or for environments that need to match your brand palette exactly, Midjourney is more flexible. The real advantage is that nobody else has the same image. Stock photos show up in competitors' ads. Midjourney outputs do not.
5. Where Midjourney Fails for Product Photos
Generating your actual product. If your product has a specific shape, label, color, or logo, Midjourney cannot reproduce it accurately from a reference image. It will generate something that looks vaguely similar and is wrong in ways that matter — wrong proportions, wrong label text, wrong colors. Every attempt I made to put a specific real product into a Midjourney image required so much post-production correction that it would have been faster to just shoot it.
Consistency across a series. If you need 20 images that all show the same product in different settings, Midjourney cannot reliably maintain product consistency between generations. Each image is a fresh generation. Small details shift. For a catalog or a product page that needs visual coherence, this is a real problem.
Anything that needs to show product details clearly. Ingredient lists, size markings, fine print, material texture — Midjourney smooths these out or invents them. If accurate product detail matters for regulatory or consumer trust reasons, do not use AI-generated images.
How to Get Better Results
Separate environment from product in your workflow. Generate backgrounds and contexts in Midjourney, shoot your actual product separately, composite in post. This is the workflow that holds up at production quality.
Describe lighting first. "Soft natural light from the left, slight shadow on the right, matte surface" produces better product-adjacent images than any amount of aesthetic description. Lighting is what makes product photography look professional.
Use --style raw in V7 for product contexts. The default V7 style adds an editorial quality that looks great for lifestyle but can feel over-processed for clean product environments. Raw mode gives you more control.
Generate more than you think you need. Product photo selects are brutal. Generate 20, expect to use three. Budget your GPU time accordingly.
Bottom Line
Midjourney V7 at $30/mo is worth it for product marketers who need lifestyle environments, packaging concepts, and photographer briefs. It is not worth it if you need images of your specific product — that still requires a real shoot.
The workflow that works: Midjourney for environments and mood, real photography for the product itself, compositing to bring them together. That combination produces results faster and cheaper than full studio shoots for campaign-level volume.
If you need accurate product renders rather than lifestyle contexts, look at Adobe Firefly with reference image uploads instead — it handles product consistency better for certain object types.
Know what you are using it for before you subscribe. The right use cases are narrow and genuinely valuable. The wrong ones will waste your time.
This post first appeared on saas.pet — daily AI tools ranked by community votes.
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