Honey jam product photography Montreal sessions capture what’s distinct about the spreads category: a small glass jar of warm-coloured product that has to feel both authentic and premium. The hero shot has to win on shelf and on screen; the macro has to make the texture visible; and the lifestyle scene has to put the spread in a story buyers want to live in.
Our Montreal studio shoots honey, jam, marmalade, nut butter, fruit-spread, tahini, miso and savoury condiment brands across all three image families. Below: how to brief the shoot and what the deliverables look like.
Three Image Families Spread Brands Need
- Glass-jar hero — clean, on-white or natural-light backdrop, for marketplaces
- Drip-detail macro — spoon, swirl, drip or pour, for paid social and PDP secondary images
- Pantry / table lifestyle — bread, cracker, pancake or cheese-board context
Glass-Jar Lighting
Glass jars filled with translucent product reflect everything in the studio. Our reflective-surface workflow keeps the studio invisible and lets the product colour be the star. We retouch out residual highlights and label distortions in post.
Pricing
Honey jam product photography Montreal projects typically book a half-day or full-day plan. A 12-SKU spread line with hero, drip macro and one lifestyle scene per hero books in the CA$1,500–CA$2,800 range with retouching included.
Bilingual Quebec Considerations
Most Quebec spread brands ship with bilingual labels. We shoot French-label and English-label passes in the same session and deliver paired files with bilingual filenames and Yoast-ready meta.
Why Calibrated Capture Matters for Honey, Jam & Spreads in 2026
The ceiling on honey jam product photography Montreal quality keeps moving up. Two years ago, a phone-camera shot in soft window light could pass on a Shopify storefront if the brand had decent design. In 2026 that’s no longer true: the average e-commerce buyer sees several hundred professionally-shot product images per week, and the brain learns to skip past anything that looks under-lit, off-white, or colour-cast within the first 200 ms of scrolling.
Calibrated studio capture solves three quiet failures at once. First, colour: the brand pink the founder fought to nail in print printing won’t match the brand pink on the PDP unless the camera is profiled and the monitor is calibrated. Second, exposure consistency: a 30-SKU catalogue shot across three days at home will have small exposure drift between SKUs that the human eye reads as ‘cheap.’ Third, edge fidelity: marketplace cut-out tools look passable on simple shapes but mangle hair, glass, fur and fine fabric — and that mangling shows up at the size buyers actually see.
For Honey, Jam & Spreads brands competing on Amazon, Shopify, Faire, Walmart Marketplace, Best Buy Marketplace and the SAQ B2B network, the cost of a calibrated shoot is recovered in the first quarter through better PDP conversion alone — usually with paid-ad CAC reduction layered on top.
Briefing the Studio: What to Send for a Honey, Jam & Spreads Shoot
A great brief shortens the shoot day and the retouch turnaround. Send these six items at kickoff and we can quote you accurately, schedule the right capture team, and pre-stage the studio for arrival day:
- Complete SKU list with sizes, colours and any variants
- Brand colour references — Pantone codes, hex values, or a printed package we can match against
- Three reference images of the desired final aesthetic (competitor PDP, magazine spread, or moodboard)
- Intended-use list — Shopify PDP, Amazon hero, Faire onboarding, paid-social, print catalogue
- Hard-deadline date if a buyer review or launch is locked
- For honey jam product photography Montreal: any platform-specific image specs your buyer is enforcing (e.g., Walmart 2400 px, Best Buy alpha-PNG)
With those six items, we typically respond within 24 hours with a final quote, a capture-day schedule, and a confirmed deliverable list. Honey, Jam & Spreads clients often add a seventh item — a one-page brand book or styling preference — and that consistently produces faster, on-aesthetic deliveries.
Studio Workflow: How a Honey, Jam & Spreads Session Runs From Drop-Off to Download
Every honey jam product photography Montreal project follows the same disciplined four-stage pipeline. Stage one is intake — product arrives at our Montreal studio, we inventory every SKU against your packing list, and we email a confirmation with a photo of received goods. Stage two is capture — typically one full day for 25–35 SKUs at four angles, with optional client onsite. Stage three is retouch — colour-correct, dust-clean, alpha cut-out, exposure equalisation across the catalogue, and any composite work. Stage four is delivery — labelled folder over secure download, web JPGs and master TIFs at print resolution, with bilingual filenames if you ship into Quebec.
Inside that pipeline, three quality-control checkpoints catch issues before delivery. Mid-day on capture, the lead photographer reviews the first set of frames against the brief and confirms styling, framing and lighting. End-of-capture day, the colourist samples colour-critical SKUs against the brand reference. End-of-retouch, a senior reviewer scans every file for dust, halo, off-shadow and edge artefacts before download is released.
Most Honey, Jam & Spreads brands tell us the retouch desk is the part of the workflow they didn’t know they needed until they saw the difference. Capture is fast; retouching is what makes a 200-SKU catalogue look like one coherent brand instead of 200 individual shots stitched together.
Quebec-Specific Considerations for Honey, Jam & Spreads Brands
Quebec brands operate under bilingual and label-compliance realities that brands outside the province sometimes underestimate. We design our deliverables around those realities so your imagery works for both your French-language Quebec retail buyer and your English-language Ontario or US wholesale buyer.
- Bilingual label-forward photography — the same SKU shot twice with French label visible and English label visible, paired in delivery
- French and English filenames, alt-text suggestions and Yoast-ready meta descriptions for every asset
- SAQ-network bottle imagery following SAQ photographic guidelines when Honey, Jam & Spreads brands ship beverages
- GS1 Verified by GS1 back-of-pack imagery for grocery-chain onboarding
- OQLF-compliant marketing imagery — no English-only text on any image used in a Quebec marketing campaign
- Health Canada cosmetic and natural-health-product label imagery requirements
Outside Quebec, honey jam product photography Montreal clients also ask us to optimise imagery for the US Amazon marketplace, where image sharpness on Apple Retina displays and 85% product-fill enforcement are the dominant constraints. Our delivery includes both Quebec-tuned and US-tuned exports when needed.
Common Honey, Jam & Spreads Product-Photography Mistakes to Avoid
Most brands hire a honey jam product photography Montreal studio after living with one of these mistakes for a year and watching conversion suffer:
- Phone-camera images on the PDP — every smartphone introduces colour cast, lens distortion and JPEG over-compression that reads as ‘amateur’ on a 27-inch retail-buyer monitor
- Off-white backgrounds — most home setups produce a 240-grey background that Amazon’s image-spec tooling rejects on first upload
- Mismatched shadows — different SKUs in the same catalogue with different shadow direction or intensity
- Wrong file format — JPG-only deliverables when a Walmart or Best Buy onboarding requires alpha PNG
- Logo and label distortion — wide-angle phone lenses bend straight lines on packaging, which buyers register as ‘cheap manufacturing’
- Inconsistent crop ratio across the catalogue — collection pages with mixed aspect ratios feel disorganised and lower buyer trust
- No lifestyle imagery — PDPs that show only white-background hero shots have lower paid-social click-through and lower email-marketing engagement
- Using AI-generated lifestyle scenes when the brand promise is craftsmanship — buyers detect AI-generated context faster every quarter, and the trust hit is now measurable
A planned honey jam product photography Montreal session avoids all eight of those failures in a single capture. The premium for doing it right is small relative to the conversion lift. The premium for doing it wrong is paid every quarter in lost cart additions and higher CAC.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you photograph runny honey with a drip mid-air?
Yes — high-speed strobe captures a clean drip moment for hero composites.
Do you shoot pancake / breakfast lifestyle scenes?
Yes — table-top breakfast lifestyle is a routine add-on for spread brands.
How many sample jars should I send?
Send 3–5 jars per SKU. Some are opened, some used for action capture.
Authoritative External References
The following external resources are widely used by Montreal e-commerce brands when planning product photography programs:
- Shopify product-photography guide — platform-specific image best practices.
- Amazon product-image specs (Seller Central) — official marketplace image rules.
Related Resources for Montreal Brands
Explore our service pages and topical guides — every link below has been verified live on this site:
- Our Product Photography Services
- Food Photography Montreal
- Wine, Spirits & Beer Product Photography Montreal
- Wholesale Linesheet Photography Montreal
- Packaging Photography Montreal
- Lifestyle Product Photography Montreal
- Montreal Product Photography Pricing Guide
- Contact Our Studio
Ready to start? Contact our Montreal product-photography studio for a tailored quote, or browse the portfolio to see recent work.





