wedding videographer Château Grand Boise
Getting married at Château Grand Boise
Château Grand Boise in Trets, a bastide facing Sainte-Victoire
Wedding videographer Château Grand Boise: filming a Provençal bastide
In the heart of the Pays d’Aix, in Trets, Château Grand Boise overlooks the Arc valley with that very distinctive view of Sainte-Victoire. I love this venue because it never feels like a backdrop created just for weddings: it is first and foremost a living wine estate, a Provençal bastide dating back to 1610, with stone walls, pale render, traditional shutters, wrought iron details, plane trees and vineyard paths. Le Jas can host around 250 seated guests, up to 300 for a cocktail-style reception, while the terraces and gardens welcome the symbolic ceremony, cocktail hour or an outdoor dinner, depending on the weather. There is also a swimming pool with a pool house for brunch, and the Bastide offers 8 bedrooms for 15 guests. The official civil wedding takes place at the town hall, then the estate becomes the setting for a symbolic, religious or secular ceremony. Among olive trees, lavender, cicadas, organic vineyards and garrigue hills, the atmosphere suits both an elegant wedding and a brighter, more sun-filled Provençal celebration, full of character without losing its sense of intimacy.

Why a wedding at Château Grand Boise feels so powerful on film
For a wedding videographer at Château Grand Boise, the venue has a real cinematic flow: everything unfolds in sequences. The preparations in the Bastide feel intimate and soft, with shutters filtering the light, before the day moves out into the gardens where couples often set the ceremony near the pool or the shaded basin. Cocktail hour works beautifully on the terrace facing Sainte-Victoire: late in the day, the sun drops over the Arc valley, the vineyards turn golden, and guests’ silhouettes stand out with real depth. I would avoid couple portraits in the middle of the afternoon, however, when the light is too harsh on pale stone and skin. The best timing is usually after cocktail hour, a few minutes before dinner, as the heat begins to ease. The mistral can be felt on the higher ground, so I always plan windshields, secured microphones and discreet placement for the vows. The only delicate point is the transition between spaces, especially with a large guest count: you need to allow time for movement between the Bastide, gardens and Le Jas, and respect the 9:30 p.m. stop for outdoor music before continuing indoors.

A discreet, cinematic approach to a wedding film at Château Grand Boise
My approach is to let the place breathe as much as the people. At Château Grand Boise, I would not try to manufacture an overly perfect Provence; it is already there, in the stones of the Bastide, the high vineyards, the plane trees and the line of Sainte-Victoire that follows almost every movement. I film with a calm presence, without interrupting conversations or slowing the day down. For an elegant wedding film, I work a lot with breathing space: a glass of the estate’s wine served during cocktail hour, a hand resting on a railing, a glance just before the ceremony entrance, cicadas during a quiet pause. If the couple wants to go further, a storytelling wedding film can include the welcome dinner, brunch at the pool house, or voices recorded beforehand. I especially love this kind of venue because it allows for a complete narrative: the arrival of loved ones, the party, the stillness of the next morning. As a wedding videographer in Provence, this is exactly the material I look for: light, emotion, rhythm and truth.
Wedding videographer Château Grand Boise, a Provence-based eye
I’m Meryll, a wedding videographer based near Aix-en-Provence, and that local proximity changes a lot in the way I film a venue like Grand Boise. I know Provençal light, its beautiful hours but also its traps: the high sun, strong contrasts on pale façades, and late afternoons that move quickly behind the hills. For a wedding at Château Grand Boise, I can discuss the timeline, ceremony, dinner entrance, speeches, movements between spaces and the order of the key moments in advance. I work with a cinematic vision, but without making the day feel heavy. My role is to observe, anticipate, blend in with the guests and be in the right place before something happens. This local eye is a real asset: I know how Provence should be filmed, how it can be told, and how to preserve in the edit that feeling of warmth, suspended time and elegant celebration among the vines, without ever turning your wedding into an artificial production.
Tips for planning a wedding at Château Grand Boise
Timeline, light and logistics for a reception in Trets
To make the most of Château Grand Boise, I recommend thinking of the wedding as a weekend, not just a single day. Arriving on Friday at 4 p.m. gives everyone time to settle in, enjoy a simple welcome dinner and begin to understand the place. On Saturday, keep the outdoor ceremony later in the afternoon, especially from May to September: before then, the light is bright and the heat can flatten expressions. The terrace facing Sainte-Victoire is ideal for cocktail hour, but plan a smooth flow towards Le Jas to avoid a long pause before dinner. The indoor room is precious as a backup plan and for the evening, especially as outdoor music must stop at 9:30 p.m., while the celebration can continue indoors until 5 a.m. On the supplier side, the caterer is your choice, but purchasing wine from the estate is required, so it is worth making it part of the experience from the start. For the film, I also recommend planning 15 minutes for couple images at sunset, no more. At Grand Boise, a few well-timed minutes are better than a long session that pulls you away from the party.
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Frequently asked questions
I always prefer to be transparent: if I have not yet filmed your exact setup at Château Grand Boise, that is not a problem. In fact, arriving with a fresh eye pushes me to observe more closely, to scout the angles, shadows, sounds and details without falling into routine. I prepare the venue in advance, then film with more artistic attention, without repeating a wedding I have already seen.
May, June and September are beautiful for the light, temperatures and outdoor dinners. July has a very sunny atmosphere, but the ceremony should be planned later to avoid heat and harsh light. October can be wonderful around the vineyards, with a softer Provence. In winter, the Bastide and Le Jas create a more intimate aesthetic, although the outdoor spaces become less central.
Yes, I regularly work with French and international couples, in both French and English. Château Grand Boise is very well suited to destination weddings in Provence: guests arrive for a weekend, discover Sainte-Victoire, the estate’s wines and the terrace, then extend the experience with brunch by the pool. I can also speak with your wedding planner to align the key moments of the film.
Yes, and it is actually one of the most interesting formats here. The estate is experienced from Friday to Sunday: arrival, welcome dinner, preparations, ceremony, reception, party, then brunch at the pool house. Filming over several days allows me to tell something deeper than a simple sequence of wedding-day images. We understand your loved ones, your energy, the spontaneous little scenes and the atmosphere of this Provençal weekend much better.
Yes, I cover weddings throughout Provence, Sainte-Victoire, Aix-en-Provence, the Luberon, the Alpilles, the Var and the Côte d’Azur. Being based in the region helps me understand distances, light, access and seasonal rhythms. For a wedding at Château Grand Boise, this proximity also helps anticipate filming timings and the constraints linked to the outdoor spaces.
Château Grand Boise is located in Trets, around 25 km east of Aix-en-Provence. From Marseille Provence Airport, allow around 45 to 50 km depending on the route and traffic. From Nice Airport, the drive is longer, around 150 km. For international guests, Marseille is usually the simplest arrival point, especially for a weekend fully organised on site.

International awards mean a lot to me, but what truly matters is the trust of each couple and the way every story continues to live over time. As a wedding videographer in Provence, I keep one simple standard: filming with honesty, editing with patience and creating images that never chase easy effects. These awards are the result of years of work, travel, encounters and a constant desire to grow.
You can also follow me on WEVSY and INSPIRATION PHOTOGRAPHERS.

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