
Wedding Photographer · Marrakech
paymentsPricing
groupLanguages
French · English · Arabic
eventVerified
Jul 2026
checkStatus
Under review
the profile
Dualvision is a photography and film studio in Marrakech run by Ayoub El Bardii, who works alongside a second shooter, Oussama, as a two person team. That pairing is the point of the operation. One of them can be on stills while the other runs the film, which for a wedding means you walk away with both a photo gallery and a cinematic edit from the same crew, shot in the same style, instead of coordinating two separate vendors who have never met. They add drone aerial footage on top, which in Marrakech, over a Palmeraie garden or the Agafay desert, is the kind of shot that makes a wedding film feel like a real production. The work leans cinematic and fine art. Ayoub describes the goal as catching the magic and the feeling of the day rather than lining people up for stiff portraits, and the published galleries back that up. You can look through real couples on the site, Sarah and Omar, Reda and Maya, Fey and Mehdi, Sriram and Amanda, Maha and Valentin, Chloe and Hamza, a mix of Moroccan celebrations and international couples who flew in to marry here. That range matters, because a photographer who has only shot one kind of wedding can be caught out by the other, and Dualvision has clearly handled both the big traditional Moroccan family day and the quieter destination ceremony. The site and captions run in French and English, so a mixed guest list is no obstacle. What a couple gets is combined photo and video coverage delivered as an online gallery and an edited film, with the aerial work built in. Pricing is quoted per project rather than published, and in our directory the range sits between 1,500 and 3,000, which is solid mid market for Marrakech and reasonable for a team giving you two disciplines at once. The 8 rating is fair: genuinely good, modern, well composed work, without the decade long back catalogue of the most established names in the city. You reach them through the site at dualvision.art or on Instagram at dualvision_photography, where the feed is current and shows the style plainly, which is the first thing I check before recommending anyone. Here is the honest caveat. Dualvision reads as a young studio, the branding and site sit around 2023, so you are hiring talent and momentum rather than a fifteen year track record, and that is fine as long as you do your checks. Because they sell photo and video together, pin down exactly how the two person team splits on the day: is Ayoub on the camera you saw on Instagram while Oussama films, or does the coverage flex, because you want the person whose eye you fell for actually shooting your key moments, not directing from the side. Confirm the deliverables in writing before you sign: how many edited photos, the length and delivery time of the film, whether a same day teaser or a next day highlight is included, and how many weeks until the full gallery and film land, since turnaround is where couples most often get let down. Ask to see one complete wedding, photos and the finished film together, not just the highlight reel, so you know the whole day holds and not only the best ten frames. And because they are a two person crew, ask what happens if one of them is ill on your date, who is the backup, and confirm they carry duplicate cameras and cards so a single equipment failure cannot cost you the day. Settle those, and you have a modern, capable photo and film team who will give your Marrakech wedding a genuinely cinematic record.