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    Home » I Moved to Canada and Couldn’t Find a Job; I Started My Art Business | Invesloan.com
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    I Moved to Canada and Couldn’t Find a Job; I Started My Art Business | Invesloan.com

    June 27, 2026Updated:June 27, 2026
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    This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Jemma Chapman. It has been edited for length and clarity.

    I’m British, and I moved to Toronto in January 2025. I had qualified as an architect the previous summer and realized I had spent most of my adult life studying and not really living.

    I thought that before I invested in a job, I’d travel. Traveling provides you with a great perspective as a designer.

    I got a Young Person’s Visa between the UK and Canada, which allows me to live in Canada for two years. That’s when I came up with a unique idea.

    I first had trouble finding a job

    I came to Canada to find a job in architecture, but I struggled to find employment for eight months.

    Only a handful of people responded to me. It affected me. I kept telling myself it was because I was a foreign talent.

    It was hard because I had been building a life. My personal life was going great; I was meeting people and volunteering. I was enjoying Toronto, but the job was a key missing component for the longevity of living here.

    In my free time, I had been drawing little illustrations of buildings and memories throughout the city. I’d frame them at home as stamps because stamps are a nod to a place and time, and I wanted to have icons of my time here.


    A hand fans out illustrated stamp-style cards over a wooden floor.

    Jemma Chapman illustrated stamps that she sells. 

    Courtesy of Jemma Chapman



    My friends told me I should share them on social media. I was worried about accumulating more debt and about people not being kind to me.

    But on a particularly rubbish day last October, I thought I’d make one video about my art project. One hundred people followed me, and then another hundred more. Very quickly, they were asking where to buy them. It was crazy because I don’t see myself as an artist.

    I began selling my tiny prints

    I believe the only way people can appreciate and value art is by having access to it, engaging with it, and understanding the joy of owning it.

    I began selling my tiny prints for $2 online under the name Toonie Stamps.

    I wanted to provide people with a way to access them physically, too, because this project is a documentation of my experience in Toronto. I wanted to encourage people to explore the city. I bought a gum vending machine on Facebook Marketplace, not knowing if my art would even fit inside. I painted them and branded them, and a friend who worked in a barbecue restaurant told me he could put the gum vending machine there. I did that in January 2026.


    A hand holds a white card with a stamp-style museum illustration against a plain wall.

    The stamps are illustrations of places she visits in Canada. 

    Courtesy of Jemma Chapman



    I now have 6 machines. Each of my machines has a neighborhood map. If people are going to that area of town, maps are a way I can encourage them to explore other local places in that neighborhood.

    I’m coming from a country where independent retail is on its knees, so I wanted to celebrate that Toronto has a high percentage of independently and locally owned small businesses. Canadians are proud of where they live and very attached to it, so I think championing this helped me get a community behind it.

    The art project became my business and changed my life

    This art project has become how I earn a living, but it’s also linked to my ethics as a person, what I believe in, and what I’d like to use my art to champion.

    I have six total machines now. One is installed in a historic post office downtown. That, plus the barbecue restaurant one, are my two permanent vending machines. I rotate the other four. Three are currently in subway stations because I recently launched a collaboration with the Toronto Transit Commission.

    I now live off of three parts of my project combined: the machines and my online print sales, a mail club where I send pieces from the project to about 150 people a month, and commissioned work.

    My visa expires in January 2027, but I can extend it for another year. I hope I get a sign-off on it.

    I would encourage everyone to share their art with the world. It was scary at first; I still feel nervous when I share new designs, but it’s always a pleasant surprise at how well they’re received.

    My advice: Emulate in the world what you want to see. Fill the gaps you think are missing; you might be surprised by how many others are happy to see those spaces taken up.

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