A material board is most useful when every sample answers a specific question. Instead of labeling a board as a finished capability list, a maker can write what the test was meant to learn: contrast, placement, artwork size, or whether the blank deserves another attempt.
For AntBelt G1 updates, this keeps the evidence grounded. A single board can show sample thinking without suggesting that all materials in a category are approved, certified, or ready for customer orders.
The board should include the material description as it was understood at the time of testing. If the coating, supplier, or finish is unknown, the note should say so. That is more useful than pretending the blank represents a whole product class.
Readers can then use the update archive as a planning reference and use the Kickstarter page for the current campaign details, reward options, and official project information.
Back AntBelt G1 on the official Kickstarter page to review current reward details and campaign updates:
