Personalized products get hard to manage when every option is added at once. A better first step is one listing, one blank, one proof photo, and one clear customization field.

AntBelt G1 is being prepared for creators who want a compact engraving workflow, but a seller still needs proof discipline. The first listing should show the object clearly, explain the personalization boundary, and avoid promising results that have not been tested.

For an Etsy-style product page, write the customer-facing option in plain language. A short name, initials, date, or simple icon is easier to review than an open-ended custom request.

Once the first sample is photographed and reviewed, the next option can be added with evidence instead of guesswork.

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