Sample photos are most useful when they are labeled with the question they were meant to answer. "Placement check on one wood blank" is more helpful than a broad claim about every piece of wood. "Logo contrast test on one card" is clearer than treating a single result as a finished product promise.

For AntBelt G1, this question-first approach keeps the update archive practical. It lets makers and small sellers understand what a sample proves without stretching that proof beyond the actual test.

A good sample label can include the object type, the design version, the date, and the next question. If the photo is being used in a listing draft or launch note, the label should stay close to the image so readers do not have to guess what they are seeing.

This habit also makes campaign content easier to evaluate. Backers can review samples as progress evidence while still checking official Kickstarter details for current rewards, risks, and final campaign information.

Back AntBelt G1 on the official Kickstarter page to review current reward details and campaign updates: