Creators shared new Midjourney SREF codes for stop-motion puppets, Franco-Belgian comics, soft collage, neon anime, and children’s-book watercolor looks. Save the codes as art-direction starting points instead of rebuilding styles from scratch.

The clearest new additions are two narrowly defined style packs. Artedeingenio’s stop-motion post introduces --sref 2089396866 as a handcrafted puppet look with expressionist caricature faces, miniature-set lighting, and the kind of tactile texture you’d expect from indie stop-motion films; the attached frames show exaggerated eyes, wrinkled fabric, and deliberately imperfect sculpted surfaces. In the same run, the Franco-Belgian comics post tags --sref 2833757731 to the Spirou/Gaston lineage, with thick contour lines, elastic facial acting, and busy comic-panel staging.
The rest of the pack broadens the palette rather than repeating it. According to promptsref’s breakdown, --sref 3700911257 --v 7 --sv6 produces a surreal editorial collage with red geometric fields and mixed-media layering, while its neon-anime recipe pairs --sref 3920949925 with --niji 6 for pink-blue contrast, clean linework, and grain that keeps the result from feeling overly synthetic. At the softer end, another promptsref post says --sref 4089868573 --v 6.1 --sv4 blends Impressionism and soft realism for miniature-painting warmth.
Single SREFs are only half the story. Posts from VVSVS show the more advanced pattern: stack four SREFs, add --profile, keep --stylize 500, then push mood with --exp 20 and --quality 2. The “pink punk forest” clip uses exactly that recipe, turning a simple scene prompt into a consistent magenta-lit world via 1313617211 4026975374 3796511843 3262620248 plus a saved profile.
A separate promptsref trend post points to --sref 2466513093 --v 7 --sv6 as a current favorite for blending contemporary impressionism with Ghibli-like warmth. Even when the posts market individual codes, the practical takeaway is that creators are now assembling SREF libraries the way filmmakers keep LUTs or photographers keep lens presets. Supporting examples like “dry bones” and “Instinct” reinforce that mood-led prompts can stay minimal when the style stack is doing most of the art direction.
For commercial use, these codes divide cleanly by job. The children’s-book watercolor SREF is the most literal publishing fit: --sref 972728021 aims at classic British ink-and-watercolor illustration, with loose brush color and pale paper backgrounds that suit picture books, packaging, and gentle editorial scenes. The soft-realism preset hits a similar market, but with a more polished, boutique finish for cards, lifestyle posts, and premium brand visuals.
The louder looks map to campaign work. The collage code is built for posters, album art, and fashion promos where scale contrast and cut-paper texture matter more than realism, while the neon anime setup looks ready for music branding, indie game art, and youth-facing packaging. The stop-motion and Franco-Belgian codes sit in the middle: specific enough to suggest a narrative universe fast, but broad enough to serve storyboards, pitch frames, or recurring character worlds without rebuilding the visual language from scratch.
Creators are moving from V8 calibration complaints to darker film-still scenes, fashion shots, and worldbuilding tests, with ECLIPTIC remakes showing stronger depth and lighting. Retest saved SREF recipes if you rely on V8 for cinematic ideation.
releaseTopview added Seedance 2.0 to Agent V2, pairing multi-scene generation with a storyboard timeline and Business Annual access billed as 365 days of unlimited generations. That moves longform video workflows toward editable sequences instead of stitched clips.
workflowCreators are moving from V8 calibration complaints to darker film-still scenes, fashion shots, and worldbuilding tests, with ECLIPTIC remakes showing stronger depth and lighting. Retest saved SREF recipes if you rely on V8 for cinematic ideation.
workflowA shared workflow converts GTA-style stills into photoreal images with Nano Banana 2, then animates them in LTX-2.3 Pro 4K using detailed material, skin, vehicle, and camera prompts. Try it for trailer-style previsualization if you want more control at lower cost.
workflowShared Nano Banana 2 workflows now cover turnaround sheets, distinctive facial traits, and photoreal rerenders that keep the framing of a reference image. Use one prompt grammar for concept art, editorial portraits, and animation prep.
Here’s a new Midjourney style reference with an indie stop-motion aesthetic: --sref 2089396866 It’s handcrafted stop-motion with stylized puppets in an expressionist caricature style. Show more
Sharing this Franco-Belgian Comic Style reference: --sref 2833757731 This style clearly belongs to the Franco-Belgian comic tradition, especially the kind of humorous illustration associated with artists like André Franquin, Jean-Jacques Sempé, or Marcel Gotlib. The closest Show more
To brighten your Sunday, here’s a wonderful illustration style for children’s books: --sref 972728021 It’s a classic British children’s book illustration style in ink and watercolor, strongly associated with the visual world of Winnie the Pooh. Show more
This Midjourney style feels like someone turned a fashion editorial, a dream, and a handmade collage into one image. sref 3700911257 is a bold surreal collage look with: warm red geometric backgrounds layered mixed media elements editorial composition strong contrast in scale aShow more
> the pink punk forest --exp 20 --quality 2 --sref 1313617211 4026975374 3796511843 3262620248 --profile 3wuupdn --stylize 500
Mar 14, 2026 - Most popular sref on PromptSref.com: 🏆 Top 1 Sref: --sref 2466513093 --v 7 --sv6 ❤️ Likes number: 2 ✨ This SREF style masterfully blends **contemporary impressionist painting** with **Studio Ghibli animation aesthetics**. It inherits the Show more