The cork-pop on a champagne bottle has a specific shape that no other sound quite matches — the wood seating gives slightly, then suddenly releases, then a second of pressurised fizz follows the bang. Most fake champagne foley skips the fizz tail and the cue immediately reads as a balloon. These 22 clips keep the full arc intact: clean cork pops with the wet release tail, the fizz of a fresh pour into a flute, multiple-glass toast clinks, and the longer cheers ambience of a room of forty people raising glasses at once.
Wedding videographers reach for the toast clinks more than any other clip in the set — they carry the ceremonial beat that the couple wants on screen. New Year's Eve montages pair the cork pop with the countdown moment. For corporate celebration videos and product launch reels, the wider cheers ambience sits under voice-over without competing. Grab any clip free — no signup, no watermark.