Saw this old thread and couldn’t resist adding something. I’ve been testing split creatives, too, and the biggest jump came from changing just the opening hook for each age group. Everything else in the ad stayed the same. Curious if anyone here is still experimenting with this—have you found any groups that react better to humor vs. straight‑to‑the‑point messaging?
Late to the party, but I’ve been checking out a few newer sellers lately, and some of them have really improved their stitching and fit compared to older options. Has anyone here tried the jackets from the smaller indie shops popping up? I’m curious how they hold up over time and if the sizing runs true.
I leaned toward warmer metals too, and mixing them with different stones kept things fun instead of stressful. I paired mine with a simple band later on, and it all blended better than I expected. I also grabbed mens wedding bands from the same place so everything felt cohesive without being matchy-matchy. If you like softer tones, rose gold plays really nicely with diamonds, morganite, or even a pop of color like sapphire.
If you're trying to dig up more context or background for whatever you're studying, using something like Search Social Media by Photo can help you connect a face to their public profiles and get a clearer picture of who’s who. I’ve used it when I only had an image to go on, and it made pulling together details way smoother without having to play detective for hours.
Using a separate b2b_access flag is a neat workaround, and I’ve done something similar to keep RevenueCat from throwing a tantrum. If you ever need to sanity‑check how you structure plans or off-app billing, I found some surprisingly handy pointers in places like https://www.b2b.blackfriday/ since it talks about how companies shape their B2B offers. For Stripe, I’d just sync the customer ID to Bubble and gate everything through that flag.