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// framework

Biomimicry Thinking

Janine Benyus, 1997

Biomimicry looks to biological organisms and natural systems as models for solving human design challenges — asking "how would nature solve this?" and drawing on 3.8 billion years of proven R&D.

// description

Biomimicry looks to biological organisms and natural systems as models for solving human design challenges. The core question is: "How would nature solve this problem?" Nature has had 3.8 billion years of R&D, and organisms that exist today represent successful solutions to problems of structure, energy, material, communication, and resilience. Biomimicry can be applied at the level of form (what it looks like), process (how it's made), or ecosystem (how it fits into a larger system).

// history

Janine Benyus, a biologist and science writer, coined the term "biomimicry" in her 1997 book Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. While engineers and designers had looked to nature for centuries (Velcro was inspired by burrs in 1941), Benyus established biomimicry as a formal discipline with its own methodology. She co-founded the Biomimicry Institute and the AskNature.org database, which catalogs biological strategies by function.

// example

A Midjourney artist developing a new coloring book style asks: "How does nature create intricate, self-similar patterns?" The answer — fractals, found in fern leaves, snowflakes, river deltas — becomes a Midjourney prompting strategy: recursive, self-similar detail structures that work at every zoom level. The resulting coloring book pages have an unusual visual richness because they're built on a natural geometric principle rather than a human-designed pattern. Every page looks complex but feels harmonious, because it follows rules that nature evolved over millions of years.

// katharyne's take

Biomimicry is one of the best Midjourney prompt sources I've found. When you're developing a new visual style, start asking "what natural system looks like this?" and work backwards from the nature reference. Coral reefs, mushroom mycelium, leaf venation, crystal growth, murmuration patterns — these are all visual systems that Midjourney renders beautifully, and they produce a distinctiveness that purely designed patterns rarely achieve. For coloring books specifically, nature-based complexity tends to be more satisfying to colour than geometric complexity because it has organic variation built in.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
I'm developing a new visual style for [coloring book / digital art / Etsy printable] series. Apply biomimicry thinking: suggest five natural systems or biological structures that would make visually rich, commercially distinctive source material for my niche. For each one, describe the visual principle it operates on and how I could use it as a Midjourney prompting framework.
Give me 10 Midjourney prompts based on specific biological systems — things like mycelium networks, bioluminescent organisms, crystal formation patterns, feather microstructure, or murmuration dynamics. For each prompt, describe what visual quality it's likely to produce and which product type (coloring book, wall art, phone cases) it would suit best.
Apply biomimicry to my creator business model, not my visuals. My business currently works like [describe it — e.g., single product lines, one platform, solo operation]. What natural ecosystem principles — redundancy, diversity, symbiosis, adaptive cycles — could I apply to make my income model more resilient? Give me three specific structural changes inspired by a natural system.
See also: Synectics · TRIZ · Forced Connections
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