When a first sample looks close but not finished, it is tempting to change the artwork immediately. A better maker habit is to take one inspection photo first. Keep the blank, the design file name, and the visible result in the same frame so the next change has a clear starting point.
That photo does not need to prove final quality. It only needs to answer a practical question: did the next version improve placement, contrast, or readability? With AntBelt G1 in the pre-launch stage, this kind of small record keeps early sample work useful without turning it into a final settings claim.
A simple inspection rhythm can be enough: photograph the setup, make one design change, photograph the next result, and keep the notes short. Makers can then compare what changed instead of relying on memory.
This is especially useful for tiny tags, cards, labels, and other small blanks where a small shift can change how the result feels.
Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details:
