Before a small shop opens a custom order option, it helps to prepare a proof page for internal review. The page does not need to be public. It can simply show the sample photo, the planned listing language, and the notes that still need customer confirmation.

This keeps the seller from promising more than the sample supports. With AntBelt G1 still in the Kickstarter pre-launch period, public wording should stay conservative: prototype examples, sample workflow, and final reward details on Kickstarter.

A useful proof page can include three plain sections: what the customer can personalize, what the current sample shows, and what needs approval before production. That structure gives the seller a better path from idea to listing.

For custom tags, cards, patches, or gift blanks, the proof page also protects the photo record. The seller can see whether the sample image actually supports the wording they want to use.

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