Do not picture me hunched over a camera roll for a week. This is the kind of job I just hand to the computer, so it is an afternoon, not a project. Here is how it works.
First, the gap
A serious customer wants proof before they hand you their work, and the bigger the account, the more they want to see it first. The Ferris wheel, the wheels, the railings, the restorations: that is your whole sales pitch, and right now it is trapped on phones where no customer will ever see it. The work is done. The proof just is not built.
How it gets built
You have thousands of images. Nobody is scrolling a camera roll for a week, so I do not ask you to. You drop the photos into one place and the computer takes it from there.
It looks at every image, recognizes what it is (a wheel, a railing, a fabrication, a restoration), scores the quality, throws out the ten near-identical shots, keeps the good one, writes a caption, and groups it all. You glance at a shortlist and approve. Then the operating system photographs each new job at intake, so the portfolio keeps building itself without anyone lifting a finger.
← Back to the operating system
Give me the photos and somewhere to put them, and your portfolio is handled.
Lesli Rose
[email protected]