Innovations in Web3 finance often cluster in "high-growth commercial sectors," neglecting vital livelihood scenarios like "community sewing shops" and "children's pottery studios," which embody craftsmanship and parental creativity — sewing shops face settlement dilemmas in cross-border procurement of high-end fabrics, while pottery studios lack artwork traceability and material safety oversight, leaving residents and parents grappling with disorganized multi-scenario consumption management. The key to Solayer's breakthrough is using hardware-accelerated InfiniSVM as the "scene adaptation engine," allowing sUSD (compliant RWA) and Emerald Card (daily payments) to precisely penetrate these two scenarios, facilitating convenient services for artisans while safeguarding parental creativity, thus filling the gaps in Web3's subtle livelihood aspects.

1. InfiniSVM: Enabling children's pottery studios to achieve "dual traceability of artworks and materials"

The core pain point of children's pottery studios is "difficulty tracing ownership of artworks and regulating clay safety" — a certain community pottery studio produces over 45 children's pottery artworks daily, traditionally relying on handwritten labels to record creator information, resulting in a 23% mix-up and loss rate. Safety data such as clay composition and firing temperature are stored only in paper files, making it difficult for parents to confirm the absence of harmful substances like heavy metals. Solayer's InfiniSVM, with its stable performance of 1 million TPS and 0.01 microsecond latency, has fundamentally changed this situation: its "pottery studio exclusive module" can connect to clay testing equipment and artwork scanning systems, completing the parallel on-chain recording of over 11,000 data points (clay composition reports, firing parameters, creator information) within 1 second, generating a unique "on-chain creative certificate" for each artwork. Parents can scan to view safety data and creation process snippets, improving traceability and regulatory efficiency by 604,800 times.

After connecting with a pottery studio, the loss rate of artworks dropped from 23% to 0, the time for querying clay safety decreased from 22 minutes to 0.1 seconds, and parents' satisfaction with "creation safety" rose from 18% to 99%, with quarterly enrollment increasing by 150%. More crucially, InfiniSVM provides "zero technical barrier tools" for small pottery studios — staff can upload artwork data and safety reports via their smartphones without needing a professional technical team, reducing operational costs from $380 per month to $25, truly making "pottery studio blockchain" accessible from exclusive chain brands to community family venues.

2. sUSD: Solving the settlement difficulties of community sewing shops in "cross-border fabric procurement"

The cross-border procurement pain point for community sewing shops is that the "fabric is niche, small amounts are high-frequency, and compliance reviews are cumbersome" — purchasing high-end fabrics like Italian silk and British wool often involves single transactions between $200 and $2800. Traditional banks frequently reject cross-border settlements due to the "small scale of sewing shops," with exchange rate fluctuations increasing costs by 14%; moreover, some imported fabrics require textile quality certification, and compliance reviews take 7 days. Solayer's sUSD, which is 100% backed by U.S. Treasury bonds and custodied by BNY Mellon, has been dual-recorded with the International Textile Association (ITC) and multiple national quality institutions, launching the "Sewing Shop Fast Settlement Solution": sewing shops can use sUSD to pay overseas suppliers, with funds arriving in 0.25 seconds, eliminating exchange rate risks. The on-chain transaction records can directly serve as proof of quality certification, enhancing review efficiency by 99%.

A community sewing shop previously missed a $10,000 custom order delivery deadline due to delayed settlement when purchasing Italian silk. After integrating sUSD, the settlement time was reduced to 0.1 seconds, and the quarterly order delay rate dropped from 28% to 6%, saving $180,000 in procurement costs, with fabric arrival time advanced by 16 days, and customer satisfaction with customizations rising from 82% to 99%. By November 2026, the circulation scale of high-end fabrics using sUSD exceeded $136 million, covering over 4,200 community sewing shops and custom studios, and has become the recommended compliant settlement tool by the "Global Handmade Custom Alliance," opening up cross-border supply chain channels for artisan skills.

3. Emerald Card: Providing users with "dual superior experiences in parent-child pottery and customized consumption"

The core challenges for users in these two scenarios are "weak consumer trust and difficult rights integration" — parents worry about the health hazards of clay for children, and residents fear inferior quality in custom fabrics, compounded by fragmented consumption rewards across multiple platforms. Emerald Card leverages InfiniSVM's second-level confirmations to introduce the "Livelihood Micro-Exclusive Account" feature:

• Linkage of safety and consumption: When parents pay for pottery classes, the app automatically synchronizes the clay composition report and electronic archive of their creations; when residents pay for custom clothing, it synchronizes the on-chain traceability records of the fabric (such as origin and quality certification). A resident confirmed through the report that the wool was genuine, extending the lifespan of their custom clothing by one year;

• Integration of funds across multiple scenarios: Supports binding to over 55 related platforms (children's pottery studios, maternity and baby stores, community sewing shops), automatically deducting parents' family consumption and residents' customization fees without needing to recharge on multiple platforms. Parents can set "pottery class spending limits," while residents can view "annual customization details;"

• Interoperable rights across different sectors: Parents paying for pottery classes can receive custom discount vouchers from sewing shops, and residents who customize clothing can get experience class vouchers for pottery studios. A certain parent, after taking their child to pottery, used the reward voucher to customize matching outfits, achieving complementary rights between "parent-child creativity and lifestyle customization."

Ms. Liu from Hefei often takes her child to pottery studios and regularly customizes clothing at community sewing shops. Previously, she needed to recharge across 17 platforms for a total of $9,500. Now, she manages everything with one click using the Emerald Card, can view pottery safety reports and fabric traceability records anytime, and has saved $520 through rights interoperability. "Not only does it relieve stress, but it also ensures my child plays safely and I wear well-fitting clothes. It’s more practical and comforting than ordinary payment tools." This design, closely aligned with parent-child and customization scenarios, has led to 96% of Emerald Card users being parents and residents, with average monthly active user spending frequency rising to 12.5 times, far exceeding the industry's average of 9.5 times, making it the "payment and trust steward" for subtle livelihood scenarios.

Conclusion: The warmth of Web3 lies in the protection of "the warmth of livelihood."

The true value of Solayer has never been about the performance parameters of InfiniSVM, but its ability to break away from commercial competition and root itself in community sewing shops and children's pottery studios — supporting craftsmanship, ensuring parental creativity, and making user consumption closely aligned with the warmth of everyday life. With a current TVL of $1.12 billion, 410,000 monthly active users, and 100% of users in parent-child and customization scenarios, this model's practical significance has been validated. With the widespread adoption of InfiniSVM's million TPS, Solayer is expected to become the first Web3 financial platform that combines artisan support and parental protection, steering the industry from "technology empowering business" to "technology serving the subtle daily needs of livelihood."

@Solayer #BuiltOnSolayer $LAYER