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Food & drink

Food Videographer & Cinematic Food Reels

Food and drink only sell when they look irresistible in motion. As a food videographer, I build every frame around appetite: slow-motion pours, the crackle of texture, steam, splash and macro detail, then deliver vertical reels that make people stop and crave. Based in Montréal, shooting for food and beverage brands worldwide.

The craft

What makes a great food video?

A great food video sells the craving before it sells the product. As a food videographer, I build three things into every cinematic food reel: appetite, slow-motion, and texture, so the work feels premium in the first three seconds.

  • Built around appetite

    Every frame is composed to make the food look irresistible: the glisten on a strawberry, the pull of honey, the crust you can almost taste. Cinematic food reels live or die on craving, so that's the first thing I light for.

  • Slow-motion that earns the stop

    Slow-motion is my signature. A pour at high speed, a splash suspended mid-air, syrup falling in a slow ribbon. These are the moments that make a thumb stop scrolling and a mouth start watering.

  • Texture, steam and splash

    Macro detail does the selling: rising steam off a fresh cup, condensation on chilled glass, a splash breaking across the frame. I shoot for the texture that makes food and drink feel real enough to reach into.

Selected work

Food & drink reels

Slow-motion pours, splashes and macro food detail: cinematic food reels shot for food and beverage brands, in Montréal and remotely worldwide.

Questions

Food videography FAQ

What food videography is, what makes food look good on camera, and how remote shoots work.

Food videography is the craft of filming food and drink so it looks irresistible in motion, capturing steam, sizzle, pours, splashes and macro texture, often in slow motion. Shot and lit for appetite, it turns a dish or drink into a craving in the first few seconds of a vertical reel.

Appetite is built with light and motion: steam off a fresh cup, the glisten on fruit, a slow pour of syrup, condensation on a cold glass, and macro texture you can almost taste. Slow motion on those moments is what turns a clip into a craving.

Yes. Drinks are a specialty, slow-motion pours, splashes, coffee, cocktails and functional beverages, alongside food. Both live on the same thing: making it look irresistible in the first three seconds.

For packaged food and drink, yes, ship the product to my Montréal studio and I handle the rest. For fresh, plated or perishable food, a local Montréal or on-location shoot usually works best.

Food videography · Montréal + remote

Got a product that pours, drips or splashes? Let's make it crave-worthy.

Ship me your product or book a Montréal shoot. I handle concept, lighting, slow-motion capture and the edit, and deliver finished vertical food reels.

See also splash & liquid video and the Montréal product videographer page.