Musical Instrument Product Photography Montreal: Guitars, Keyboards, Brass & Retail Catalogue Imagery

Montreal has one of the most vibrant music cultures in North America. From the independent guitar luthiers of Mile End to the synthesizer boutiques of the Plateau and the drum retailers of Saint-Laurent Boulevard, musical instrument brands in this city need photography that captures the soul of their products — not just the specs. Musical instrument product photography in Montreal requires a specialized blend of technical precision and artistic vision that Impression Photography has been delivering for over 15 years.

What Makes Musical Instrument Photography Unique

Musical instruments combine materials that are notoriously difficult to photograph: lacquered wood bodies with deep grain and gloss, polished metal hardware, matte finishes, fabric-covered speaker grilles, delicate strings and winding wire, and intricate mechanical components like tuning machines, valves, and keys. Each material requires different lighting strategies to reveal its character without blowing out reflections or losing shadow detail in dark recesses.

A guitar hero shot on a pure white background, for example, requires careful flagging to prevent the curved body from rendering as a flat silhouette. A brass trumpet demands precisely positioned reflector cards to create the characteristic elongated highlight that communicates the polish and craftsmanship of the instrument. A drumhead needs to show the slight texture of the Mylar and the fine tuning rods at the rim — details that buyers on Reverb.com, Long & McQuade, or your own Shopify store look for before committing to a purchase.

Instrument Photography for E-Commerce and Marketplaces

Montreal’s music retailers and instrument brands increasingly sell online — through their own websites, through Amazon.ca, and through platforms like Reverb, eBay Canada, and Sweetwater. Each platform has its own image requirements, and meeting those specifications while producing images that genuinely sell the product is where professional Montreal product photography makes the difference.

For Amazon Canada listings, your main image must be on pure white with no shadows or props. For Reverb listings, lifestyle shots that show the instrument in a musician’s environment — a vintage amp in the background, a pedalboard visible on the floor — perform significantly better than sterile studio shots. Our team produces compliant hero images and conversion-focused lifestyle imagery in the same session, giving you assets for every channel. See our full Amazon product photography Montreal service page for marketplace compliance details.

Guitars, Basses, and Stringed Instruments

Acoustic and electric guitars are the most commonly photographed instruments in our Montreal studio. A complete guitar photography package typically includes a front body hero shot, a rear body shot showing the back finish, headstock detail, nut and first position detail, bridge and saddle detail, and a lifestyle image. For multi-SKU guitar lines, we batch-shoot efficiently to keep per-unit costs low while maintaining image consistency across the catalogue.

For custom or boutique instruments made by Montreal luthiers, we invest extra time in revealing the maker’s artistry — the figured maple top, the hand-carved heel, the custom inlay work. These instruments deserve imagery that commands their asking price, and we deliver it.

Keyboards, Synthesizers, and Electronic Instruments

Synthesizers, workstations, and MIDI controllers present a different challenge. The primary visual element is often the control surface — knobs, faders, buttons, screens — and the photography must render these in sharp focus with enough depth of field to read panel labels while conveying the product’s professional build quality. We use tilt-shift and focus-stacking techniques to achieve this when necessary, ensuring your keyboard or synthesizer looks as impressive in a product photo as it does on stage.

For products with illuminated displays or backlit controls, we capture both powered-on and powered-off states, giving you maximum flexibility for different advertising contexts. See our industrial and electronics product photography page for related technical photography services.

Drums, Percussion, and Accessories

Drum kit photography involves both individual product shots (snare drum, cymbals, hardware, heads) and assembled kit hero images. We have the studio space and lighting infrastructure to shoot full drum kits as well as individual components. Cymbal photography in particular demands specialized lighting to capture the complex surface of raw brass or lathed bronze without over-specular highlights that lose the detail in the wash.

Drumstick, mallet, and percussion accessory photography is high-volume work — many of our percussion clients have catalogues of 50–200 SKUs — and we excel at batch photography that maintains consistent look and feel across large product lines at competitive per-unit rates.

Brass, Woodwinds, and Classical Instruments

Trumpets, trombones, saxophones, clarinets, flutes, and orchestral string instruments each have their own photographic requirements. Brass instruments are all about highlight management — the way light plays across a lacquered bell reveals craftsmanship and finish quality. Woodwind instruments require sharp focus on the keywork mechanism while keeping the bore visible. Bowed instruments (violins, cellos, double basses) need to show both the flame of the maple back and the varnish depth of the spruce top.

We work with Montreal’s orchestral instrument dealers, music schools, and individual makers to produce imagery that honours these instruments’ heritage and commands respect in any sales context. See our watch and accessories photography page for related precision product photography services.

Lifestyle and In-Use Photography for Music Brands

The most powerful imagery for music brands shows instruments being played. Our lifestyle photography service — featuring professional musician models, authentic studio and stage environments, and atmospheric lighting — produces imagery for album covers, artist endorsement campaigns, social media, and retail advertising. Montreal’s music community is deep: we work with local musicians across genres to cast authentic talent for your product imagery.

Lifestyle music photography from our Montreal studio is used by instrument brands, music retailers, recording studios, and music education institutions across Canada and internationally. View our product photography portfolio for examples of our lifestyle work.

Packaging and Accessory Photography

Musical accessories — strings, picks, capos, straps, cases, rosin, reeds — are high-volume, low-cost products that still need professional photography to compete on marketplace search results pages. We shoot accessories in both flat lay and three-dimensional configurations, using our flat lay photography service to create clean, compelling images for accessories that don’t have complex three-dimensional form.

Instrument Photography Pricing and Process

Musical instrument photography is priced by complexity, number of units, and required image count. A standard guitar package with 6–8 final images runs approximately $200–350. Full drum kit photography starts at $450. Accessory and small-format instrument photography is available from $80–$150 per SKU. Review our Montreal product photography pricing or contact us for a custom quote. Volume discounts apply for catalogues of 10+ instruments.

Book Your Instrument Photo Shoot in Montreal

Impression Photography serves music retailers, instrument manufacturers, custom luthiers, and music educators across Montreal, Laval, the South Shore, and the broader Quebec music industry. Our studio is accessible, our process is efficient, and our results consistently exceed client expectations. Explore our complete range of product photography services in Montreal, or contact us today to schedule a consultation.

FAQ: Musical Instrument Product Photography Montreal

Do you photograph vintage or collector instruments?
Yes, with extra care for fragile finishes and irreplaceable instruments.

Can you shoot instruments at our retail location?
Yes, we offer on-location shoots for large or immovable instrument displays.

How do you handle instruments with complex reflective surfaces like chrome hardware?
We use polarizing filters and custom flag panels to control specular highlights.

Do you offer video for instruments?
Yes — short product demo videos and musician lifestyle videos are available. See our video product photography service.

More Related Montreal Product Photography Coverage

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Related Coverage

Musical instrument brands share manufacturing detail demands and lifestyle contexts with several adjacent niches. See:

Musical Instrument Product Photography Montreal: Guitars, Strings, Brass & Drum Kits

Musical instrument product photography montreal covers a wider range than almost any other product category. One session might include a $8,000 Gibson Custom Shop Les Paul, a $400 intermediate student violin and a box of plectrums. Each one has different lighting, different colour behaviour and different buyer psychology. This guide explains how Montreal instrument brands and luthiers should plan a shoot that converts.

Instruments Sell on Two Axes: Craft and Condition

For guitar, bass, violin and brass buyers, the photograph is the entire fit check. A shopper cannot pick up the instrument, so every grain, binding seam and finish crack has to be visible at high resolution. This puts instrument work closer in spirit to jewellery photography and watch & accessories photography than to typical apparel or food shoots. Expect macro lenses, focus stacking and very careful control of reflective finishes.

Shot List per Instrument

  • Hero front — centred, symmetric, clean white.
  • 3/4 beauty — catching body contour and pickup angle.
  • Back + side — for buyers verifying build quality.
  • Headstock + logo — authenticates premium brands.
  • Pickup / bridge / hardware macros — the decision-maker frames.
  • Fretboard detail — inlays, fret ends, radius visible.
  • Serial number — for vintage and custom shop listings.
  • Scale reference / case shot — helps size perception.

Reflective and Glossy Finish Control

Lacquered bodies, chrome hardware and polished brass all behave like mirrors. We use giant scrims, flags and polarised light — the same toolkit we bring to hardware and tools photography and tech gadgets — to kill unwanted reflections without flattening the finish. The goal is to preserve the “wet” look of a lacquer while eliminating visible studio gear.

Colour: Sunburst, Cherry, Candy Apple

Guitar finishes live and die on colour. A “3-tone sunburst” that shoots too amber looks cheap; an under-saturated cherry red loses the glow that makes the guitar desirable. Every SKU gets a colour-checker pass and finish proofing against the physical sample.

Large-Instrument Production

Drum kits, grand pianos and full amp stacks need a studio with a white cyc at least 8 feet high. Our partner spaces in Griffintown and Saint-Henri both offer this. Lead time is usually 5 business days for booking a large-instrument shoot.

Video & 360 for Instrument E-Commerce

A turntable 360 of an electric guitar doubles conversion on Shopify for serious instrument buyers. Video short-clips of a luthier strumming or bowing build trust that a still cannot. Our video product photography service and 360 guide have the technical specs.

Vintage vs New: Two Different Retouching Philosophies

A new instrument deserves conservative retouching — remove dust, correct colour, fix seams, and leave the finish untouched. Vintage and used instruments should be retouched even less: scratches, dings and patina sell the honesty of the listing. Aggressive healing brush work on vintage guitars is a reverse-engineerable fraud flag, and buyers punish it.

Studio Logistics for Instrument Brands

Bring instruments in hard cases, climate-acclimated to studio temperature for at least an hour. String tension changes finish stress visibly. A truly professional session keeps humidity in the 40-50% range for hollow-body guitars and all acoustics. See behind the scenes at a Montreal product photography session.

Montreal Music Ecosystem Advantage

Montreal is home to Godin, Seagull, Simon & Patrick and dozens of independent luthiers. The local instrument-manufacturing community is unique in North America. We regularly shoot for boutique Saint-Henri and Mile End luthiers, as well as established brands exporting worldwide.

Pricing

Ghost-less instrument e-commerce runs $80-$150 CAD per image in Montreal for a clean hero/back/side/macro set. Full campaigns with motion and 360 are bid project-by-project. Full breakdown on the pricing guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you shoot both acoustic and electric instruments in one session?

Yes. Most brands ship a mix — acoustic, electric, amp, pedals, accessories — and a well-planned half-day can capture 12-18 SKUs across categories.

Do you photograph vintage instruments with scratches and wear?

Vintage character sells, it doesn’t hurt — we shoot every scratch, patina and fret wear point honestly. For reissues and new product, we retouch conservatively to preserve authenticity.

Can you handle large items like drums and amps?

Yes. Our Montreal studio partners carry cycloramas and can accommodate full drum kits, Marshall stacks and 8-foot backdrops for piano-scale setups.

Do you shoot 360-degree spins for guitar listings?

Yes. 360 is especially effective for electric guitars, basses and hardware where the body contour tells the buying story. See our 360 guide for specs.

Book Your Montreal Product Photography Session

Our Montreal product photography services cover every category in this guide, with transparent pricing and bilingual service across the island. Explore our portfolio, check our rate card on the pricing page, or head to the contact page to request a quote. You can also learn more about our Montreal studio and the production workflow we follow on every shoot.

Related reading: For music brands that also release vinyl pressings see our guide on Vinyl Record Product Photography Montreal.