7-Eleven
photoshoot in Bangkok
Candid frames inside a Thai 7-Eleven. Direct flash, fish-eye lens, real snacks and drinks as props.
Recent sessions
Candid, flash-lit, fish-eye fun
We shoot you actually using the store. Picking up a toastie, opening a slushie, paying at the counter, eating outside on a plastic stool.
The setup is direct on-camera flash plus a fish-eye lens. The result is a creative, slightly distorted convenience-store look. It pairs naturally with our cinematic style.
A 7-Eleven covers in around 20 minutes. The neon lighting is consistent any time of day, the product walls give you ready-made backgrounds, and the narrow aisles frame you tightly.
It is the opposite of a posed studio shoot. You move, react, laugh. We catch the in-between frames.
Three steps, twenty minutes
We pick a 7-Eleven on the route of your main session. Smaller stores have less foot traffic, larger ones have more product variety.
You buy what you would actually buy. The shoot follows your real route through the store, not a staged one.
We work fast. Aisles, fridge door open, paying at the counter, eating outside. The whole thing wraps in around 20 minutes.
Add it to a street session
A 7-Eleven session works as a quick stylistic side quest in a longer street shoot. The interior contrast against an outdoor walk gives your set more variety without adding much time.
In Chinatown we often hit a 7-Eleven on Yaowarat between temple stops. In Talat Noi the small corner stores work for the same reason. Neon sessions at night and the flash interior frames sit naturally next to each other.
- 7-Elevens on Yaowarat for the Chinatown route
- Smaller corner stores in Talat Noi for tighter frames
- Modern central Bangkok stores with bigger product walls
- Any 7-Eleven near where your main session runs
Why flash + fish-eye
Direct on-camera flash flattens the room and pulls everything forward. It is the look of late-night convenience-store photos: sharp, punchy, slightly harsh in a good way.
The fish-eye lens fits the whole aisle, the product wall, and your reaction in one frame. The slight distortion adds character without making things unrecognisable.
Together they read as the inside of a 7-Eleven instantly. The visual shorthand does the work, you just have to react naturally to it.
Frequently
Asked Questions
How long does a 7-Eleven session take?+
Around 20 minutes. That is enough to cover the aisles, the fridges, the counter, and a few frames outside without disrupting the store. Because it is short, we usually slot it into a longer street session as one stop among several.
Day or night?+
Indoor light inside a 7-Eleven is the same any time of day, so timing matters less here than at most outdoor locations. We pick the time based on what other stops are in the session. We shoot in the afternoon and evening, never in the morning.
Why pick a 7-Eleven over a regular location?+
It gives you frames that look unlike anything else in your set. It is short, fun, and works as a stylistic break in a longer outdoor session. It is not the right pick if you want clean lifestyle portraits, but it is exactly right if you want one or two stand-out frames in a wider story.
What if we feel awkward on camera?+
The point of the format is that you are doing real things, picking up snacks, opening drinks, paying. There is no pose to get right. We direct lightly and shoot the in-between moments. Most people relax inside the first two or three frames.
Ready to add a
7-Eleven stop?
A 20-minute side quest inside your next street session. Flash, fish-eye, real reactions.









