Mobility Aid Product Photography Montreal serves Quebec healthcare brands selling wheelchairs, walkers, rollators, canes, transfer benches, raised toilet seats, grab bars and a long tail of accessible-living devices. The buyer is a senior, a person with a disability, a caregiver, an occupational therapist, a long-term-care procurement manager — and they all need imagery that shows the device clearly, dignifiedly, with all of the regulatory labels intact. The Montreal studio is set up for that exact brief.
Mobility-aid imagery is dignity, clarity and compliance
The product-photography problem for a mobility aid is three problems in one. Dignity — the imagery has to show a person using the device without making the person an object. Clarity — every brake, lock, height-adjust and folding mechanism has to be visible at catalogue resolution. Compliance — the bilingual safety panel and the Health Canada device licence have to be photographed legibly. Solving all three at once is what the studio in Montreal trains its mobility-aid pipeline around.
Dignity-first lifestyle: real people, real homes, real consent
The studio works with a roster of senior and disability-community models. All have signed releases. The brief is dignity-first: the camera is at the model’s eye level, the framing centres on the person’s purposeful action (standing from a chair, reaching for a cup), and the mobility aid is in the photograph as enabling, not as the focal point. The result reads to a senior shopper as themselves, not as a stranger.
The same dignity register applies to our baby & infant work — the imagery serves the user, not the camera.
Engineering-clarity studio captures: brakes, locks, height-adjust
Every mobility aid gets a four-view orthographic on the white cyclorama: front, side, three-quarter and folded-transit. Plus a macro pass on the brake levers, the locking pins, the height-adjustment indicators and the seat-pad attachment. The pipeline is identical to our auto-parts engineering register, applied to a healthcare device.
Bilingual safety panels and Health Canada compliance
Health Canada and the Charter of the French Language together require that the device’s safety information appear in French and English with French-equal-or-greater-prominence. The studio captures FR and EN safety panels at capture time. We work the brand’s regulatory-affairs team into a single sign-off before delivery. See bilingual product photography and pharmaceutical & medical device imagery.
Accessible-living scene library
The studio carries a Quebec-style accessible-bathroom set with grab bars, raised toilet seat and a transfer bench. We also have a ‘living-room with chair-and-rollator’ set and a ‘kitchen with reach-extender and walker’ set. The sets are shot to the same colour register as the studio captures so the page reads as a unified catalogue, not as a stitched-together gallery.
Folding and transit-state imagery
Most modern rollators and walkers fold. The fold sequence is a buyer-decision feature — does this fit in a Honda Civic trunk? The studio captures a six-frame fold sequence on the same backdrop. The customer sees the device’s transit footprint clearly.
The same six-frame approach applies to backpack-stowable canes, telescoping mobility scoot accessories and travel-fold transfer benches.
DME and B2B catalogue integration
Most mobility-aid brands sell partly DTC and partly through DME (Durable Medical Equipment) distribution into long-term-care, hospital and pharmacy channels. The studio’s deliverables include the B2B linesheet imagery and the industrial & B2B spec-grade frames the procurement teams expect.
Cost and timeline for a Montreal mobility-aid shoot
A six-product mobility-aid launch with full studio + accessible-bathroom set + bilingual compliance runs C$5,400–C$8,200. A 24-product full-catalogue with three lifestyle sets runs C$13,500–C$22,000. See pricing and the 2025 pricing breakdown. Brief at the contact page.
Hand-only and partial-body framing for privacy-first marketing
Some campaigns can’t show the user’s face — long-term-care brand campaigns, hospital procurement collateral, government-grant-supported brands. The studio’s hand-only framing rig captures the device in use without identifying the model. A close-up of a hand on a walker handle, a side-on of a foot reaching for a transfer-bench step, a top-down of a cane gripped at the right knuckle position — all of these read as authentic device-in-use without breaking privacy commitments.
The same privacy-first framing applies to our dental care and supplement & vitamin shoots — health-category imagery where the device or product is hero and the person is contextual.
Conclusion — mobility aid photography in Montreal
Mobility aid product photography in Montreal is dignity, clarity and compliance held in a single visual system. The studio carries the model roster, the accessible-living set library and the regulatory-affairs sign-off pipeline that lets a Quebec DME brand ship a launch in three to five weeks. Start at the service list, see portfolio, brief at contact.
Frequently asked questions
Do you handle Health-Canada-listed Class I medical devices in your imagery?
Yes. The studio’s compliance pipeline captures the Health Canada Medical Device Establishment Licence number, lot/serial macro and the bilingual safety panel against a calibrated white card. We work to a brand’s regulatory affairs team’s review checklist before delivery.
Can the imagery show the mobility aid in use without identifying a private model?
Yes. The studio carries a roster of consenting senior and disability-community models with signed releases. We can also frame partial-body or hand-only imagery so the device is hero, the person is contextual.
My rollator folds. Can the fold sequence be captured on the catalogue?
Yes. A six-frame fold sequence — fully extended, side-handles squeezed, mid-fold, almost-folded, transit-locked, transport-handle engaged — runs as a single horizontal on the product page.
Do you handle the home-safety lifestyle context — bathroom grab bars, raised toilet seats, transfer benches?
Yes. The studio’s accessible-bathroom set replicates a Quebec home with grab bars, raised toilet seat and transfer bench. The set is shot to the same colour and lighting register as the studio captures, so the catalogue reads as one coordinated library.
Are these images usable on Amazon Canada’s medical-device category and on a CGS- or RAMQ-aligned DTC site?
Yes. The deliverable supports Amazon Canada’s medical-device 1:1 hero on white, plus the bilingual safety-panel macro that aligns with Quebec public-health and CGS specification grids.





