Many maker ideas start too wide: a gift set, a product line, a full design board. A better first step is one test question. Can the logo stay readable at this size? Does the border feel centered? Is the sample easy to photograph for review?

Keeping the first question narrow prevents early AntBelt G1 sample work from turning into a final-performance claim. It also makes the next action obvious. If readability is the question, judge readability. If placement is the question, judge placement.

A one-question test can still be useful for a bigger project. It creates a clean record before the maker adds more variables, colors, materials, or layout changes.

The result is a calmer workflow: choose one blank, ask one question, run one test, write one next step.

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