When a maker runs several early samples, the review photo often matters as much as the mark itself. A tilted photo, a different background, or a missing label can make two samples look harder to compare than they really are.
For AntBelt G1 sample planning, a fixed review photo means using the same angle, distance, lighting direction, and label habit after each test. It does not need to be studio photography. It only needs to make the next decision easier.
This is a practical habit for small creative desks. A maker can place the sample on the same corner of the bench, keep a simple handwritten note in frame, and photograph the result before changing the artwork. If a future sample looks better, the reason is easier to trace.
The review photo should answer plain questions:
- What blank was used?
- Which artwork version was tested?
- What setup note should be checked next?
- Is the sample being judged for layout, readability, contrast, or handling?
AntBelt G1 campaign updates include sample and workflow context, but backers should still read early visuals carefully. A sample photo is useful evidence for a specific step. It should not be stretched into a broad material guarantee or a final production promise.
