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Eyewear & Sunglasses Product Photography Montreal: Frames That Sell

Eyewear is one of the most technical product categories in all of e-commerce. Reflective glass or polycarbonate lenses, anti-reflective coatings, ultra-thin metal frames, colour-shifting acetate — every element of a frame actively fights the photographer. Get it right, and customers can see exactly how a pair will suit them. Get it wrong, and your return rate climbs. This is the full guide to professional eyewear & sunglasses product photography Montreal brands rely on.

Why Eyewear Needs a Specialized Shoot

The problems are unique: the lens reflects every light source in the room; anti-reflective coatings introduce subtle purples and greens under the wrong lighting; acetate frames need colour fidelity you cannot fake in post; and the geometry of a frame means one hero angle never tells the whole story. Customers buying glasses need to see at least eight angles — not three.

Standard Eyewear Shot List

  • Straight-on front view with clean white background — see white-background photography.
  • 3/4 front to show depth and temple shape.
  • Pure side profile (both temples).
  • Top-down flat lay — see flat lay photography.
  • Folded frame detail.
  • Temple tip macro (logo, pattern, hinge detail).
  • Lens detail (polarization, AR coating, engraved model number).
  • Lifestyle on-model or styled flat lay — see lifestyle product photography.

Lighting and Reflection Control

Eyewear studios use three techniques constantly:

  1. Tented diffusion. A full-surround softbox or light tent gives the lens and frame even, wrapped illumination with no hot spots.
  2. Black flags. Strategically placed negative fill prevents lens glare from swallowing the model’s eyes or your logo.
  3. Focus stacking. Frames are physically deep; a single wide-aperture shot leaves either the bridge or the temple soft. We stack multiple focus planes and composite them in post.

Sunglasses-Specific Considerations

Sunglass lenses typically need:

  • Polarization-compliant lighting (so the polarized lens does not look opaque).
  • Gradient-lens colour accuracy preserved through the whole range.
  • UV coating reflection captured subtly to look premium, not distracting.
  • On-face shots that show the lens darkness honestly to reduce returns.

Montreal Eyewear Ecosystem

Montreal has a growing community of independent eyewear designers, optometrist-founded DTC brands, and specialty retailers that need e-commerce-ready imagery. Our neighbourhood guide covers where most of this innovation is clustered — Mile End, the Plateau and Griffintown.

Pricing and Packages

Eyewear is typically priced per SKU with a frames-per-hour baseline. Typical catalog shoots range from 40 to 150 SKUs depending on the line’s depth. Review our Montreal pricing guide and pricing page for current rates.

Related Categories We Also Cover

Before the Shoot

  1. Supply frames with lenses installed (never empty).
  2. Send your Pantone or Hex colour references for acetate colour fidelity.
  3. Indicate which SKUs are marketed as polarized so we plan light accordingly.
  4. Clarify if you need on-model lifestyle shots — we coordinate models and stylists from our Montreal network.
  5. Share your preferred platform export specs — Amazon, Shopify and wholesale each need different dimensions. See e-commerce photo requirements for 2026.

Book Your Eyewear Shoot

Send your line sheet via our contact page and we will return a shoot plan with fixed pricing within one business day. For brands with seasonal drops, we recommend booking two shoots per year — one for white-background catalog, one for lifestyle and campaign imagery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you photograph prescription frames with empty display lenses? We strongly prefer frames with lenses installed — photographing empty frames changes reflections and distorts proportions.

How do you handle mirror-coated sunglasses? Mirror coatings need a light tent plus dedicated highlight control to avoid hotspots. It is one of our most common techniques.

Do you shoot on-model sunglass campaigns? Yes — we coordinate models, stylists and locations when you need campaign imagery alongside catalog.

Can you ghost-mannequin sunglasses onto disembodied heads? For line sheets we often use styled heads or mannequin busts; for catalog we prefer flat or hanging displays to keep attention on the frame.

How long until I get images? Standard catalog turnaround is 5–7 business days; rush is 24–48 hours for hero SKUs.

External reading: the Vision Council and eyewear industry publications publish useful category benchmarks for e-commerce conversion.

Why Montreal Is a Smart Base for This Category

Montreal combines four rare advantages for consumer-goods founders: the studio cost structure is meaningfully below Toronto and New York, creative talent is deep, shipping logistics to a US or Canadian customer base are fast, and the city’s bilingual consumer market is one of North America’s most sophisticated testing grounds for new packaging. For founders, that means you can invest the saved photography budget into paid acquisition, wholesale samples or inventory — the three places marginal capital actually moves the business forward.

How Photography Integrates With Your Overall Launch

A product launch is not a photo shoot — it is a sequence of content deliverables timed against stock, paid media, retailer onboarding and PR outreach. Typical sequencing looks like:

  1. T-60 days: packaging finals, sample production, photography brief.
  2. T-45: shoot day, raws captured, reference cuts sent for approval.
  3. T-35: retouched hero images and catalog pack delivered.
  4. T-25: lifestyle and social cuts delivered, paid media team loads assets.
  5. T-10: final press-release images and PR-kit assets sent to journalists.
  6. Launch day: full creative stack already live on Shopify, Amazon, wholesale PDFs and paid social.

The brands that get this sequence right consistently outperform their category averages. The ones that treat photography as a T-7 scramble end up with inconsistent assets, missing cuts and paid campaigns that underperform.

Measuring the ROI of a Professional Shoot

Don’t guess whether professional photography is worth the investment — measure it. Standard measurement pattern:

  • Before vs after conversion rate on product pages where you swap in new imagery.
  • Add-to-cart rate on category and browse pages.
  • Ad creative testing — A/B test a 30-day window of new imagery vs old in Meta and Google.
  • Return rate — better photography often reduces returns because customers receive what they expected.
  • Wholesale buy-in — count how many retailer meetings convert to orders after updated line sheets.

Most brands we work with see measurable lifts inside 30 days. If you don’t, the next question is not about the images — it’s about pricing, offer or product-market fit.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Shooting too few images per SKU. Amazon alone rewards 7+. Shopify product pages convert best with 6–9. Wholesale line sheets often need 3 standard angles. Plan for the most demanding channel.
  2. Booking a generalist photographer. Wedding and portrait photographers do not use the right lighting rigs for commercial product work — expect rework.
  3. Skipping the shot list. Without a written plan you’ll leave the shoot with hero images but no detail shots, no lifestyle, and no social cuts.
  4. Waiting until ad-buy week to shoot. Your paid-media team needs creative options in hand weeks before launch.
  5. Over-retouching. Consumers spot airbrushed images. Restraint builds trust.

More Reading

For a deeper look at category-specific playbooks, browse our guides on signs your brand needs professional product photography, studio vs. freelancer in Montreal, and the 2026 e-commerce product photography trends guide. Your brand’s neighborhood may also have a dedicated guide — check Montreal’s best neighbourhoods for product photography.

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