Migrate from krea to midjourney.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
For teams whose Krea usage is mostly straight text-to-image stills, Midjourney's text-to-image generation is the natural consolidation target: prompt Midjourney (web app or /imagine on Discord) for the same concept art, marketing visuals, and stylized renders, and use HD mode (--hd) on V8.1 for higher-resolution output plus Midjourney's upscalers. Move the workflow by porting prompts into Midjourney, leaning on style references (--sref) and parameters to re-establish the aesthetic you tuned in Krea, and treating Midjourney's four-image grids as the exploration step Krea's model picker used to provide. This collapses a separate Krea subscription into a single Midjourney seat for the common case where realtime canvas, video, and 3D are not core to the team's output.
- Warning: Midjourney is a single first-party model family (V7/V8.1), not an aggregator — you lose Krea's per-job choice of Flux, Imagen, Krea 2, and 64+ other models, so prompts and reference images must be re-tuned to Midjourney's look rather than transferred verbatim.
- Warning: Midjourney has no realtime/sketch canvas and no native 3D or lipsync; if any of that is load-bearing in the Krea workflow, this pattern only covers the still-image slice and the rest needs a different home.
- Warning: Midjourney has no permanent free tier as of 2026 and meters fast GPU-time per plan (HD and quality modes change the cost per job), so the cost model differs from Krea's daily/monthly compute units — re-estimate volume before assuming parity.