Plates land on a wooden table, glasses meet for a toast, a knife slips off the edge of a bowl and clangs onto porcelain — tableware foley is what makes a restaurant scene believable when the camera is two feet from the actors and the boom is dodging arms. 83 clips here cover that whole register, recorded dry and centred so the mix engineer can place each impact wherever the scene demands.
You will find plate stacks set down with a single clean tap, china clinks at three intensities for ambient bistro beds, fork-against-plate scrapes that read as nervous eating, and glass tings of wine and water at distinct pitches. Tray-set-down thuds round out the kit for service-station shots. Cooking-channel editors layer the lighter taps under chop and plate-up footage. Foley artists pull the heavier tray drops for slapstick. The dialogue-friendly bistro ambiences sit comfortably under restaurant scenes without fighting voices. Free to grab, no signup or watermark.