Creating Portfolios
Where Organization Meets Creativity
Photo Supreme is widely recognized for its powerful cataloging and organizing features. Among its most versatile tools are Portfolios: a flexible way to group, curate, and present your images without disturbing your actual folder structure.
Yet many users only scratch the surface of what Portfolios can do. Let’s dive into what they are, why you should use them, and some practical examples to get the most out of them.
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What Are Portfolios?
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In Photo Supreme, a Portfolio is a top-level container designed to help you group images logically.
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Each Portfolio can contain Collections.
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Collections can be broken down into Sub-Collections.
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And Sub-Collections can themselves contain further Sub-Collections, giving you a hierarchy as deep as your project requires.
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A good real-world analogy is a binder with tab dividers.
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The binder itself is the Portfolio.
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Inside it, you insert tabbed sections for different topics → these are the Collections.
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Within each section, you can add sub-tabs → these are the Sub-Collections, and you can keep nesting them as much as you want.
Just like in a binder, the same “page” (your photo) can appear under multiple tabs without needing to make a duplicate.
Why Use Portfolios?
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Logical Grouping Without File Duplication
Keep your file system neat while still organizing images in countless different ways. -
Hierarchical Flexibility
With unlimited nesting of Collections and Sub-Collections, you can mirror even the most complex project structures. -
Cross-Purpose Organization
The same photo can live in a client Collection, a year-in-review Collection, and a personal project—all without duplication. -
Ease of Presentation
Portfolios make it simple to pull up curated sets of images for clients, competitions, or personal review. -
Efficient Culling
Use Collections and nested Sub-Collections to progressively narrow down your selections. Start broad, then create Sub-Collections like Round 1 Picks, Round 2 Refined, Top 20, and Final Selection.
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Static vs. Dynamic Collections
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Photo Supreme supports two types of Collections inside Portfolios: Static and Dynamic.
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Static Collections are manually curated
You decide exactly which images belong. They’re perfect for projects where you hand-pick photos, like client deliverables, contests, or personal selections.
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Dynamic Collections
Dynamic Collections, sometimes called "Smart Collections", are rule-based. They automatically populate with images that match specific criteria you define (for example: rating ≥ 4 stars, keyword “Landscape,” and capture date within 2025).
Dynamic Collections are incredibly useful when you want your Portfolio to update itself as your catalog grows. For instance, you could create a Portfolio called Top Work, containing a Dynamic Collection that automatically gathers all five-star photos tagged with “Portfolio,” no manual work required.
You can even combine both types: use a Dynamic Collection to gather candidates, then refine them manually into Static Sub-Collections as you cull and edit.
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Practical Uses for Portfolios, Collections, and Sub-Collections
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Here are some ways photographers and creatives put this hierarchy into practice:
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Client Projects
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Portfolio: Clients
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Collection: Client X
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Sub-Collections: Proofs, Selects, Final Delivery
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Thematic Organization
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Portfolio: Travel Photography
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Collection: Italy 2023
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Sub-Collections: Rome, Florence, Venice
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Yearly Highlights
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Portfolio: Best of 2024
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Collections by season (Spring, Summer, Fall)
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Sub-Collections for specific shoots
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Competitions or Submissions
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Portfolio: Photo Contests
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Collection: Landscape Awards 2025
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Sub-Collections: Shortlist, Round 2 Refined, Final Edits
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Culling and Refinement
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Portfolio: Wildlife Project
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Collection: Full Shoot (all images)
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Sub-Collection: Round 1 Picks
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Sub-Collection inside Round 1 Picks: Top 20
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Sub-Collection inside Top 20: Final 5
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Personal Projects
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Portfolio: Photo Book Project
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Collections: Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3
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Nested Sub-Collections for draft vs. final selections
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Dynamic Example
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Portfolio: Five-Star Favorites
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Dynamic Collection: automatically gathers all photos rated 5 stars
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Sub-Collections: Landscape, Portraits, Street (automatically updated as you tag and rate images)
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Tips for Using Portfolios Effectively
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Plan Your Hierarchies: Before you start, think about how Portfolios, Collections, and Sub-Collections can mirror your real-world projects.
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Mix with Catalog Labels: Use labels and keywords for metadata searches, then build Portfolios to refine and curate.
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Stay Flexible: Don’t treat Portfolios as permanent. Update them as your needs evolve.
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Leverage Nested Sub-Collections for Culling: Treat each level of Sub-Collections as a funnel to progressively refine your best images.
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Combine Static and Dynamic: Use Dynamic Collections to gather, and Static ones to curate.
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Final Thoughts
Portfolios in Photo Supreme give you a structured yet flexible framework for organizing your images beyond folders and metadata. With Portfolios containing both Static and Dynamic Collections, and infinitely nestable Sub-Collections, you can mirror the way you actually work, whether by client, theme, project, or creative process.
And because they’re so well suited for culling, auto-organization, and presentation, Portfolios aren’t just about structure: they’re an active part of how you refine and showcase your photography.
If you haven’t explored Portfolios yet, think of them as your digital binder of projects, part manual, part automatic, always organized. Start broad, refine with Sub-Collections, and watch how much easier it becomes to manage and present your work.