Wedding Videographer Provence
Not A Photographer Wedding Films
Wedding films in Provence
In Provence, the days are long and the light is strong. It arrives early, shifts slowly, and brings a warmth and depth to the footage that no amount of post-production can replicate. It is one of the reasons I keep coming back to film here.
That light also shapes the way weddings unfold. Dinners are almost always held outside. String lights above the tables, the night settling in gently, guests gathered in the warmth of the evening. There is something distinctly Latin about the way people celebrate here, something intimate and slightly unreal, as if the whole day had quietly slipped into a film. And that variety of spaces, from the ceremony to the cocktail hour to dinner under the stars, creates more of the moments that actually matter in a film.
This is precisely what draws international couples to Provence for their destination wedding. The landscape they saw in films and magazines is real. And that reality is what ends up on screen.
As a wedding videographer in Provence, I work across venues that each have their own distinct character, from the Var to the Alpilles and through the Vaucluse. I build every film as a narrative, not a sequence of beautiful moments strung together. What I look for is what rings true on the day. Filmed with the precision of someone who leaves nothing to chance.
I travel to Provence several times a season from Montpellier. It is the destination I cover most in the South of France outside of Occitanie. I speak English fluently, and a large part of my work involves international couples and cross-border teams. Whether you are based in London, New York, or anywhere else, the distance doesn’t change how we work together.




A venue that hosts high-end weddings, with spaces that know how to receive guests, and a late afternoon light over the vineyards that finds its way into the film without being asked.

Café Léoube, Provence
On the Plage du Pellegrin, in the Var. The ceremony takes place directly on the beach, with the Mediterranean as a backdrop. The light here is raw, direct, unforgiving. And that is exactly what makes the films shot here so singular.

Domaine du Petit Roulet, Provence
A 16th century estate, among century-old olive trees and cypresses, in the heart of Provence. A place with history, a human scale, and a Provençal atmosphere that needs no staging to exist on film. Inside, a barn with historical terracotta tiles, and suspended above the dancefloor, a chandelier of fifty wicker balls made by a Moroccan craftsman. The kind of detail you cannot manufacture, and that inevitably ends up in the film.

Château des Barrenques, Provence
A 15th century château set in a six-hectare park, 40 minutes from Avignon. You walk down a long tree-lined avenue before reaching the ceremony space, in the shade of century-old plane trees, with views over Mont Ventoux and lavender fields. One of those settings where Provence is not a backdrop. It is a presence. All of that ends up in the film.

Mas des Costes, Provence
In the Parc Naturel des Alpilles, between Saint-Rémy-de-Provence and Gordes. A domain designed around outdoor celebrations, with the particular quality of light the Alpilles are known for: intense, high-contrast, giving depth and relief to every image.
Getting married in Provence?

