Flat blanks and cylindrical objects should not be reviewed from the same photo note. They ask different placement questions, and a clean comparison starts by separating the evidence before drawing conclusions.

AntBelt supports cylindrical engraving, so a curved-object test can fit naturally into an early sample plan. The useful review is still conservative: photograph the object position, the artwork boundary, and the visible result, then write down what needs another check.

This approach avoids overclaiming. A flask, tumbler, or other round object can show that a curved surface is part of the workflow conversation, but it should not be used to invent final accessory specifications, object dimensions, material guarantees, or shipping details.

For makers and small shops, separate photos make decisions easier. One folder can hold flat-card layout tests; another can hold curved-object notes. Each sample stays useful because it answers its own question.

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