Flat blanks and cylindrical items should not be judged from the same note line. They ask different setup questions, and the photos usually need different context. A clean material log keeps flat samples in one section and cylindrical engraving tests in another.

AntBelt supports cylindrical engraving, but public content should stay careful before final campaign details are complete. Do not turn a curved-surface sample into a promise about accessory specs, object dimensions, speed, material guarantees, or shipping. Treat it as an angle to test and document clearly.

A practical log can use separate columns: blank type, surface shape, artwork boundary, photo reference, and next question. That gives the reviewer enough context to compare what changed without mixing two different workflows.

For sellers planning bottles, cups, small round gifts, or curved promotional items, this separation also makes the future product page easier to write honestly.

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