Made by photographers, for photographers.

Hi, I’m Gina Risso — a photographer with over 20 years behind the camera.

I’ve built and rebuilt my portfolio more times than I can count, trying to keep it aligned with how my work changes.

And somehow, editing it never really got easier.

Not because I didn’t know what I was doing —but because it’s different when it’s your own work..

So I did what a lot of photographers do. I hired portfolio consultants.

Some of their edits were incredible. They brought clarity, direction, and a strong point of view. But then I’d work with someone new…and get a completely different edit.

A different perspective.

A different direction.

And I’d find myself wondering: Which one is right?

And more importantly — is this a portfolio I actually love?

Or just someone else’s perspective of my work?

And what happens when I create new work?

That carefully curated portfolio —the one I spent over $1,000 on —starts to shift the moment I add something new.

It loses its balance. Its flow. But does it have to?

Because the reality is — our work doesn’t stand still.

We inevitably shoot something better. Something different. Something we’re excited about. Something more aligned with where we want to go.

And our portfolio should be able to evolve with it. Not stay locked in a single moment.

Even Google tells us to revisit and update our sites regularly —to refine, adjust, and keep things current.

So why is our portfolio treated like something static?

I didn’t set out to build a tool.

I just wanted a way to step back, see my work more clearly, and refine it over time.

That process turned into Your Portfolio Lab.

A way to select, sequence, and shape your work into a cohesive portfolio — whenever you need it.

Not once a year.

Not once per consultant.

But anytime.

It’s not perfect — but it’s made a real difference in how I see and edit my own work — and it’s getting stronger everyday.

It’s helped me step back, curate my portfolio, and make clearer decisions about what belongs — and what to leave out.

If this sounds familiar, I built this for you.

Try it with your own work!