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Portfolio

Proof for the higher-ticket work: weddings, private events, styled tables, and editorial florals.

A strong portfolio should feel selective, calm, and full of proof that the studio can handle both intimate and large-scale work.

Filter the work

Organize the gallery around the categories clients actually care about.

Use categories to separate weddings, events, editorial work, daily flowers, and workshops without making the gallery feel busy.

Case study rhythm

Use narrative blocks to explain the work, not just show another image.

A premium portfolio works better when it includes context: the client brief, the palette, the room, and what the flowers were meant to do.

  • Venue and event type
  • Palette and floral direction
  • Installed elements and room notes
  • What made the design feel special
Easy edit note

Where the portfolio cards live now

Mix wide installation moments, bouquet close-ups, table styling, and workshop scenes so the gallery feels layered and believable.

1 fileFor gallery cards
0 layout editsNo HTML card cloning
Clear tagsFor filter buttons
Use the middle of the site to slow the pace

Give the portfolio room to breathe so the work feels curated instead of crowded.

These wider sections help you reset the visual rhythm and can double as seasonal statements, client quotes, or press-style callouts.