A small personalization menu is easier to sell when it starts from one clear proof photo. Instead of offering every font, symbol, placement, and blank at once, a seller can begin with the exact option that has already been photographed and reviewed.

The menu can stay narrow: one product type, one artwork position, one proof style, and one customer note field. That keeps expectations clear while the shop learns what buyers ask for and what the workflow can support.

AntBelt G1 is relevant to this kind of planning because compact engraving work often lives beside product photography, packing notes, and customer approval messages. The machine is only one part of the seller workflow; the proof photo is what keeps the offer understandable.

For pre-launch buyers, this is a useful way to think about early product testing without assuming final throughput, finished accessory details, or guaranteed material outcomes. Start with the photographed offer, then expand only after the workflow is clear.

Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details: