TL;DR: Here's the thing that took me longer than it should have to articulate: WordPress (WooCommerce) and Webflow both have a mental model of what a product is. WooCommerce thinks a product has a name, a price, a few variations (size, color), some images, and ships in a box. 📖 Reading time: ~42 min What's in this article The Actual Problem: Generic Platforms Don't Fit Weird Products Both platforms assume you're selling something normal. You probably aren't. How I Actually Tested Both How I Actually Tested Both WordPress + WooCommerce Setup for a Niche Store Webflow Ecommerce Setup for a Niche Store The 10,000-Item Wall You'll Hit Before You Finish Your Catalog The Exact Moment WordPress Won (and When It Lost) The Actual Problem: Generic Platforms Don't Fit Weird Products Both platforms assume you're selling something normal. You probably aren't. Here's the thing that took me longer than it should have to articulate: WordPress (WooCommerce) and Webflow both have a mental model of what a product is.…