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New online shop features gifts made by neurodiverse Montreal youth

A Montreal school for neurodiverse youth is selling the handmade goods made by its students in a new online store.

Items for sale range from leatherjournals and colourfulcardsto marmalade and granola

Students at Transitional Education Career Centre (TECC) have been making a variety of different products to sell online. (CBC)

A medley of sounds can be heard in the hallways of a school in downtown Montreal.

A lathe spins as woodworkers shape wooden utensils. Florists snip and snap away at flower stems. Sewing machines hum as tote bags take shape.In other words, business as usual.

"Everything that we do here helps to prepare students for the workplace," saidJosh Cunningham, vice principal of the Transitional Education Career Centre (TECC), a branch of Summit School.

The TECCaims to help itshundred or so neurodiverse students, aged 16-21,transition from the classroom into the working world.

Except that Monday wasa special day: the school just launched anew web store, featuring the handmade goods made by the students.

Items for sale range from hand-made leatherjournals and colourfulcardsto marmalade and granola.

Cunningham said he hopes the online storewill help people see that his students are valuable, contributing members in the community.

"I think the students' work will speak for itself," he said.

All the proceeds from sales will go back into school programming, helping to fund activities, outings and new tools. Three bucks willget you a keychainand$60 will buy you a seasonal bouquet.

Zachary Kruse, a student at Transitional Education Career Centre, says his favourite part of working in the floral arrangement program is the smell of the flowers. (CBC)

"The outcome of the marketplace is really important to these students, because the capacity and their ability to take on new students is determined by the funding," saidCatherine Blair-Timothy, thecreative director at Lightspeed the company that built the back end of theirweb store free of charge.

The site was designed to beas accessible and easyto use as possible, for both the makers and the buyers, she explained. Legible fonts, high-contrast colours and large clickable elements were all key.

As the new site went live Monday, second-year student Zachary Krusewas busy at work in the floral arrangement room. Of all the different trades he's tried at the school, this one is his favourite.

"I like all the flowers and stuff because they all smell so great," he said.

The Transitional Education Career Centre has just launched anew webstore featuring handmade goods made by the students. (CBC)

Plus, Kruse said, he continues to learn a lot on the job.

"I didn't know that each flower has a certain meaning like the rose means love."

While selling gifts online is a new chapter for the students and staff, this is not thefirst time marketing their creations.

They've done manypop-up shops and artisan shows over the years, so the online store will only add to the skills these students are building.

Cunningham said heanticipates a flood of holiday shoppers on the new platform.

With files from Rowan Kennedy