Browse by product type

OOTDBuy Spreadsheet Categories

Choose the product type before the product link. That one decision makes photos, sizing, price and weight much easier to compare.

Start here

Choose the category closest to the item you actually want, then decide which two or three details should be visible before a row earns a click. Cards use available OOTDBuy directory routes on Findsindex; electronics opens a product search because no dedicated electronics route is listed.

Why it works

Categories turn vague browsing into fair comparison

A bag and a hoodie can have the same price and equally polished photos, yet require completely different checks. Grouping similar rows prevents superficial signals from winning.

Let the product type decide what you check

Pick the closest category before comparing rows. Shoes, clothing, bags, watches and electronics need different photos and measurements; placing them under the same standard makes a shortlist less reliable.

Clothing starts with measurements

For T-shirts, sweaters and sportswear, check chest width, length, fabric and the print or seam areas. Jackets also need shoulder and sleeve measurements plus clear closure photos. Pants and shorts need the waist, rise and inseam. Socks should show material, length and the number of pairs included.

Jerseys need front-and-back confirmation

Confirm the sport, cut, visible size chart and any personalization. Compare the front and back layouts with the selected source-page variant; a single front photo can hide a different name, number or panel design.

Small items still need scale

Headwear needs circumference and adjustment details. Belts and sunglasses need dimensions plus clear hardware or hinge photos. For slippers, compare footbed length and sole shape rather than relying only on the printed size.

Choose the category, write down the two details most likely to change your decision, then use the cards below. If the row is too vague to identify, follow the product-finding steps.

Category desk

Open the route that matches your shortlist

Each card opens the matching standard product category on Findsindex. The destination is category-wide rather than limited to one spreadsheet guide.

Shoes & sneakers

Includes: casual shoes, sneakers, trainers and other everyday footwear.

Before clicking: check the side profile, sole, toe shape, close-ups, sizing notes and box weight relevance.

Browse shoes ↗

Bags

Includes: backpacks, shoulder bags, totes and travel carry.

Before clicking: check dimensions, corners, handles, hardware, interior layout and empty weight.

Browse bags ↗

Hoodies

Includes: zip hoodies, pullovers, sweatshirts and heavier casual layers.

Before clicking: check garment measurements, fabric notes, cuffs, hood structure, seams and print placement.

Browse hoodies ↗

Watches

Focus on: face, case, crown, clasp and strap details.

Before clicking: check dimensions, side profile, dial alignment, clasp, crown and the exact listing wording.

Browse watches ↗

Accessories & jewelry

Includes: jewelry, headwear, glasses, belts and small add-ons.

Before clicking: check dimensions, material wording, closures, macro photos and how scale is shown.

Browse accessories ↗

Electronics

Focus on: specifications, included parts and compatibility.

Before clicking: check the exact model, voltage, plugs, included parts, measurements and support limits.

Browse electronics ↗

Choose your lane

Which category should you start with?

Start with the product type that has the clearest use in your head—not the one with the loudest row.

You know the use, not the exact item

Begin with the broad parent: shoes, bags, hoodies, watches, accessories or electronics. Write down the use and one essential feature.

You have several unrelated saved links

Split them into category groups. Do not compare until each group contains items that solve roughly the same problem.

You only know the brand or model

Identify the neutral product type first. That gives you a consistent way to compare photos, measurements and specifications.

Common misses

Category mistakes that weaken a shortlist

A clean card grid does not fix a messy decision. Keep the category useful after you click.

Mixing categories by price

A low-priced bag should not compete with a low-priced T-shirt. The product-specific evidence is different.

Using one photo standard everywhere

Close-up stitching may matter on a bag; measurements may matter more on pants or a hoodie.

Treating a parent route as proof

A Findsindex category is a discovery page. Open the destination and check each external listing yourself.

Name the exact product type“Clothing” is often too broad; “heavy hoodie” is more useful.
Choose the two details that matter mostFit and measurements, proportions and finish, or specification and compatibility.
Set a stop pointCompare three plausible rows before collecting more.
Keep external status in mindLinks, listings and policies can change after this guide is published.

Before opening

A small checklist beats a large tab stack

Use the full spreadsheet checklist when a row reaches the shortlist, and review buyer safety notes before you rely on an external destination.

Ready to browse the full OOTDBuy hub?

Use the hub for broad finds, or stay category-first with the global links above.

Open OOTDBuy finds ↗