Originally from Ukraine, arrived in Toronto 3 years ago. By day, lab manager at a scientific research lab. By every other hour — the brain behind OMŌN's strategy, content, documentation, and Instagram. Builds the vision around a full-time job.
Originally from Moldova, moved to Toronto a few months before OMŌN started — following her husband's work. The one who built the entire Shopify store from scratch, having barely touched a laptop in years. Obsessed with getting every detail exactly right.
Masha, a lab manager from Ukraine. Olga, newly arrived from Moldova. They met walking their dogs — a mini schnauzer named Ryuk and a Jack Russell named Elvis — in a Toronto dog park. Three months later they had a live jewelry store, built with zero e-commerce experience and a lot of AI. This is the full, honest story of how OMŌN happened.
01 · The OriginHow did OMŌN Jewelry start?
It started with dogs. My neighbor Olga and I kept running into each other at the dog park — then at the gym, then for coffee after the gym. The kind of friendship that builds in small increments until you realize you've been talking about the same ideas for months. One of those ideas was: what if we started something?
We went through a lot of options. Clothes. Hats. Various things we thought we could source and sell. But every time, we'd hit the same practical wall: sizing. Returns on clothing are brutal. "This doesn't fit" is the most common reason people send things back, and as a tiny startup with no logistics team, we couldn't absorb that. We needed something small — easy to ship, no size variants, high perceived value relative to weight.
"We needed something small, easy to ship, and that didn't come in sizes. Jewelry was the obvious answer — and we decided that on the way to the gym."
Jewelry. We decided on the way to a workout, the way you make a lot of good decisions — quickly, without overthinking it, while you're focused on something else. By the time we got to the gym, it was settled. We were starting a jewelry brand.
02 · The NameHow did you come up with the name OMŌN?
Before we built anything, we needed a name. We fed ChatGPT everything: our concept, our aesthetic, our values, our own names, the vibe we were going for. It came back with a list of options — and one of them was OMŌN.
Our first reaction was to laugh. "OMON" sounded like the name of a tactical police unit — intimidating, serious, the complete opposite of the quiet, minimal jewelry brand we had in mind.
We kept making fun of it. "Very intimidating jewelry." "Buy our earrings or face consequences." And then somewhere in that joke, we found the real meaning: Om — the spiritual symbol of continuity and peace — that goes On. OMŌN. The joke unlocked something genuine. We kept it.
This is one of the best things AI can do for you in the early stages of a business: throw enough ideas at the wall that one of them — even accidentally — sparks something real. ChatGPT didn't name us. But it gave us the raw material to find our own name. That distinction matters.
03 · The StoreCan you build a Shopify store with no tech skills?
I want to be very clear about something: when we started building the OMŌN store, Olga — who took on the entire technical build — had not really used a laptop in a while. We're talking opening-the-wrong-browser territory. No Shopify experience. No e-commerce experience. No web development background of any kind.
She built the whole store anyway.
Here's how: she used ChatGPT as a real-time tutor. Every step she didn't understand, she asked. How do I add a product? What's a collection? How do I connect a domain? What does this error mean? ChatGPT walked her through all of it — patiently, at 11pm, in plain language. It wasn't perfect. There were problems. But she launched a real, functional, live Shopify store with zero prior skills.
"She used ChatGPT as a real-time tutor for every step she didn't understand. It walked her through everything — patiently, at 11pm, in plain language."
Before listing anything, we ordered physical samples of every product we planned to sell — the actual jewelry, in our hands, tested and worn. Not to understand checkout flows, but to test quality and get a feel for what we were actually putting our name on. If it didn't pass the "would I wear this every day?" test, it didn't make the store.
If you're starting from zero: Shopify is genuinely doable without a tech background. The Dawn theme (free) is clean and works beautifully for jewelry. Keep your app list short — every app you add is another thing that can break or slow your store. And order physical samples of your products before you launch. You'll catch quality issues before your customers do.
03B · The PhotosHow did you create product photos without a studio?
Here's the thing nobody in the "how to start a jewelry business" world talks about openly: professional product photography is expensive. A studio session, a model, a photographer — for a brand that hasn't made its first sale to a stranger yet, that's a real barrier.
We didn't do it that way.
We used AI to create our product imagery. Not as a shortcut we're embarrassed about — as a genuinely creative decision we're still exploring and refining. Here's the stack we actually used:
We're still finding our way in it. Some outputs are stunning. Some need a lot of prompting to get right. Some look slightly off in ways that are hard to articulate. It's not a replacement for great photography — it's a different kind of creative process, one that rewards patience, experimentation, and a willingness to try fifteen versions before you find the one that works. We're getting faster at it every week.
The broader point: in 2025 and 2026, a small jewelry brand can produce professional-looking visual content without a studio budget. The tools exist. The learning curve is real but manageable. And being early to this — being honest about it, even — is a differentiator, not a liability.
04 · The AIWhat AI tools actually help when launching a small business?
Beyond the photography stack above, we use AI across almost every part of the business. Here's the full breakdown — specific, because specific is actually useful.
The most important thing we learned about working with AI: the quality of what you get back is directly proportional to the quality of what you put in. Generic prompt, generic output. When you give an AI your brand name, your aesthetic references, your customer, your tone, and three examples of copy you love — it gives you something actually useful.
"The AI won't know what makes your brand sound like your brand. That's still your job. Its job is to move faster than a blank page."
05 · The Honest PartWhat do Shopify beginners miss most about SEO and AI search?
This is the part of the post we wish existed before we launched.
You can spend weeks building a beautiful Shopify store — a store you're genuinely proud of — and then discover that it's essentially invisible to the internet. Not because it's bad. Because you didn't know about the invisible layer.
We found out about SEO the way most beginners do: by noticing that no one was visiting. We'd been asking ChatGPT to audit our site for other reasons, and it started flagging things we'd never thought about. SEO. Alt texts. Image descriptions. Metadata. The technical scaffolding underneath a website that search engines and AI tools use to understand what you are and whether to surface you.
How Google decides whether to show your site when someone searches. Depends on keywords in your copy, page titles, headings, and how other sites link to you.
How AI tools like Google's AI Overview, ChatGPT, and Perplexity decide whether to quote your site when answering questions. Requires structured FAQ content and schema markup.
How AI models learn to associate your brand with specific topics and recommend you in generated responses. Requires clear, structured data about who you are and what you do.
Descriptions attached to every image on your site. Search engines can't see images — they read the alt text. A photo of a gold ring with no alt text is invisible to Google.
Our advice: ask ChatGPT or Claude to audit your homepage before you launch. Paste in your page copy and ask: "What SEO, AEO, and GEO improvements would you make to this page?" It will surface most of the gaps in under two minutes. We wish we'd done this on day one.
This is the thing about building a business in 2025 — the tools to do everything exist, and many of them are free. But you have to know to ask for them. The gap isn't capability. It's knowing what questions to ask.
06 · Right NowWhere is OMŌN Jewelry now, three months after launching?
OMŌN is three months old. We have a live store. We have products we're proud of. We've made sales — to our friends so far, which means the next milestone (a sale to a complete stranger) is still ahead of us, and we're working toward it.
We're not going to pretend that's not humbling. Every founder blog you read is written from the other side of some success. We're writing this from the middle, where it's still uncertain, where the traffic numbers make us anxious, where we're still figuring out how to get from "our friends love it" to "strangers find us."
"Every founder blog is written from the other side of success. We're writing this from the middle — where it's still uncertain and still worth doing."
What we do know: we're expanding. OMŌN started with classic jewelry — rings, earrings, delicate chains. We're moving into body chains, wallet chains, multipurpose pieces, pinky rings. Things with a bit more attitude. The brand is evolving, and so are we.
This blog — Behind the Chain — is where we'll document all of it. The tools, the mistakes, the invisible stuff nobody tells you about, the honest numbers when we have them. If you're building something from scratch, we'd love to hear from you. Drop a comment, send a DM, say hi. We read everything.
Are you building something from scratch?
We're figuring it out too. Come find us on Instagram or just reply to this post — we actually respond.
FAQFrequently Asked Questions About Starting a Shopify Jewelry Store
Yes — and we're proof. One of our co-founders had literally forgotten how to use a laptop when we started. She built the entire Shopify store anyway, using ChatGPT to guide her through every step she didn't understand. The platform is genuinely beginner-friendly. The harder part is the invisible stuff — SEO, alt texts, metadata — that nobody tells you about at the start.
ChatGPT and Claude are the two we reach for most. ChatGPT for fast brainstorming, how-to questions, and first drafts. Claude when we need something more strategic or nuanced. Canva AI for design assets. The key: treat AI like a collaborator, not a search engine. Give it context about your brand every time, and always rewrite the output to sound like you.
The invisible layer: SEO, AEO, GEO, image alt texts, page metadata. You can build a beautiful store and have it be completely invisible to search engines and AI tools because you didn't know these things existed. Ask an AI to audit your homepage before you launch — paste in your copy and ask what SEO and AEO improvements it would make. You'll catch most gaps in two minutes.
Three reasons: it ships cheaply (small and light), it doesn't come in sizes (no "this doesn't fit" returns), and it has high perceived value relative to its cost and weight. For a first-time founder without a logistics team, avoiding the returns nightmare of clothing is a genuine competitive advantage. This was our exact reasoning when we chose jewelry over clothes and hats.
OMŌN Jewelry uses Nanobanana to place real product photos onto AI-generated model images, Seedream for model creation, Midjourney for visual concept and mood work, and Kling and Grok for animation and video content. This approach replaces the need for expensive studio photography sessions and professional models, making high-quality visual content accessible to early-stage brands with small budgets.
Copy your homepage text, product descriptions, and About page into ChatGPT and ask: "Audit this content for SEO, AEO, and GEO. What keywords am I missing? What structured data should I add? Are my headings optimized for AI search?" It will surface missing alt text reminders, keyword gaps, heading structure issues, and schema markup recommendations. Free, takes under five minutes, catches most beginner mistakes.
The core technical setup — Shopify account, free theme (Dawn is best for jewelry), domain connection, and payment setup — takes one to two days. Getting the store genuinely polished, including product photography, SEO-optimized copy, and a complete About page, takes most first-time founders 3–4 weeks of evenings and weekends. Photography is always the biggest time investment and the hardest to rush.
OMŌN Jewelry is a Toronto-based minimalist jewelry brand founded in 2025 by two co-founders who met at a dog park. The brand sells delicate chains, rings, and jewelry online at omonjewelry.com, and is expanding into body chains, wallet chains, and pinky rings. OMŌN was built entirely using AI tools with no prior e-commerce or web development experience.
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