Small shops often focus on the sample first and the customer wording later. For personalized engraving, the wording deserves attention before orders open. A short proof policy can prevent confusion about spelling, artwork placement, revision timing, and approval.

Keep the language plain. Tell buyers what they will receive for review, what details they must check, and when the shop will treat the proof as approved. Avoid promising turnaround times or material outcomes that have not been tested in the shop's own workflow.

This is especially useful for sellers planning names, dates, monograms, small icons, or gift messages. A clear proof step lets the seller keep creative options open while still protecting the order from avoidable mistakes.

AntBelt G1 content is focused on practical creator workflows before launch. A proof-language habit pairs well with compact engraving because it makes the selling process as intentional as the sample bench.

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