Small blanks make artwork mistakes feel larger because there is less room to hide a crooked logo, crowded name, or missed reference edge. Before using AntBelt G1 on a new idea, treat the first minute as an artwork check instead of a production step.
A useful check can stay simple. Keep the design file, blank position, proof photo, and note from the last attempt together. If the artwork is changed, write down what changed before running another sample. This keeps the next review focused on the actual decision instead of guessing from memory.
For small tags, cards, patches, and desk-side gift pieces, the goal is not to promise a finished product from one mark. The goal is to learn whether the design fits the blank, whether the placement is readable, and whether the next sample deserves a different layout.
- Save one reference image of the blank before marking.
- Check the artwork size against the visible edge or fixture mark.
- Review text spacing before adding names or dates.
- Photograph the first sample in the same position each time.
- Keep the note beside the sample, not in a separate thread.
This kind of routine is especially helpful for creators following the AntBelt G1 campaign because it turns sample photos into real workflow evidence. It also keeps early claims conservative: the sample can show setup, placement, and direction without pretending to prove every final use case.
