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Alt text for jewelry, done properly.
Upload a jewelry photo and get three ready-to-paste alt-text variants — an accessibility-first version for WCAG compliance, an SEO version for product pages, and a long-descriptive version for screen-reader users. All written from what the AI actually sees in the photo.
What makes good jewelry alt text
- Factual, not marketing. WCAG 1.1.1 considers words like "beautiful," "stunning," or "gorgeous" non-informative — they tell the screen-reader user nothing specific. Describe the piece.
- Don't start with "image of" or "photo of." Screen readers already announce <img> role. Starting the alt with it repeats the announcement redundantly.
- Lead with the item type and primary material. "Gold pendant with…" beats "Pendant in gold with…" — screen-reader users skim alt text the same way sighted users skim product pages.
- ≤125 characters for accessibility. JAWS, NVDA, and VoiceOver all truncate or pause awkwardly beyond that.
- Don't claim unverifiable specifics in alt — carat weight, price, brand, or origin. Those belong in the product description, not alt.
Why a jewelry-specific generator
Generic alt-text tools say "a close-up of a ring." Useless. Our generator reads whether the metal is yellow gold, white gold, rose gold, silver, or platinum; whether the stone is diamond, sapphire, pearl, or turquoise; and whether the setting is solitaire, halo, pavé, bezel, or channel. That level of specificity is what distinguishes an alt that ranks in image search from one Google treats as filler.