DESIGNING TYPE-DRIVEN BRAND VISIONS IN MIDJOURNEY
What if you could bring your brand vision to life before the pitch deck is even done?
Graphic designers have always used moodboards, sketches, and Photoshop mockups to explore typographic direction. But now—with MidJourney—you can actually see the brand world you’re building… almost instantly.
Join House of gAi founder Anthony Wood for a free live session where we’ll show you how to design bold, expressive type-based visuals using MidJourney—and turn those into stunning brand concept prototypes. No 3D artist required yet.
Why MidJourney matters for designers
“Previously, a designer would’ve been limited to moodboards or hours in Photoshop—maybe handing it off to a 3D artist if the client bought in. But with MidJourney, you can create rich, dimensional letterforms to sell the vision early—sometimes even skipping the handoff completely.”
– Anthony Wood, House of gAi
This session will show you how to do just that—visioning a brand through type, using nothing more than smart prompting, creativity, and the MidJourney app.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
This 60-minute, interactive session will guide you through:
How to build a reference image that sets the tone for your type direction
Using that reference to create typographic forms in MidJourney
Working with materials, lighting, and perspective to shape brand feel
Follow along live as we create inside the MidJourney app
The workflow behind turning AI outputs into moodboards, concepts, and pitches
This isn’t about creating polished logos—it’s about sparking creative alignment, fast.
CREATING 3D TYPE IN MIDJOURNEY LIVE MEETUP
Date: Thursday, April 10
Time: 2PM CST | 4PM NYC | 1PM LA | 8PM UK | 7AM Friday Sydney
Where: LIVE on the Creative Futures Hub
🎟️ Cost: Free – Limited Spots
JOIN THE MIDJOURNEY LIVE MEETUP IF YOU ARE:
A Graphic designer wanting to exploring branding and identity
A Creative director or freelancer wanting to level up
A Designer who is curious about AI tools for faster workflows
Wanting to bring a vibe to life through type
If you’ve ever wished your moodboards could talk—this is for you.