Market booth gift ideas can grow too quickly. A seller may want coasters, tags, cards, ornaments, and desk pieces on the same weekend, but every new blank adds another proofing path. A tighter approach is to keep the first offer inside one sample family.
With AntBelt G1, that might mean testing one kind of flat gift blank first, then building a small menu around design variations rather than unrelated materials. The shop gets a cleaner photo set, clearer customer choices, and fewer notes to manage during a busy event.
The goal is not to promise final output volume or a guaranteed material result. The goal is to make the first booth-ready idea easier to explain, photograph, and review.
- Pick one blank family before adding variants.
- Use the same photo angle for each proof.
- Keep names, initials, or date options in one template group.
- Separate test notes from customer-facing listing copy.
- Add a second family only after the first one is documented.
This kind of narrow product planning makes AntBelt G1 updates more useful because it connects sample photos to a real selling decision, not just a generic maker demo.
