Small custom tags can become confusing if a seller starts taking requests before the proof process is clear. Before opening an order form, write the proof wording first: what the customer will review, how many changes are included, and when the design is considered approved.

This is not a promise about production speed or material behavior. It is a communication habit. A clear proof step helps the seller keep each order inside the sample that has actually been tested.

AntBelt G1 is being prepared for makers and small shops that want a more compact engraving workflow. For early shop planning, the most useful step is often not a bigger product menu. It is a narrower menu with clearer proof language.

A seller can start with one tag shape, one artwork style, and one photo standard. Once that workflow is understood, adding new products becomes less risky.

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