Pick the category first
Name the kind of item and the questions that matter for it. That gives your browsing a boundary.
Independent lovegobuy spreadsheet guide
Enter a product name, category, or source link. Results open on Findsindex, where you can compare photos, sizing, price context, and product details.
Search results and shortcut links open Findsindex in a new tab.
lovegobuy is an independent browsing guide for lovegobuy spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent lovegobuy or Findsindex.
Browse the Findsindex directory
Go straight to the product type you want, then compare similar listings instead of working through one mixed page.
Everyday footwear and broader shoe searches in one lane.
Open shoes ↗Pullovers and zip layers where fit and fabric matter.
Open hoodies ↗T-shirts, button shirts, and lighter tops to compare.
Open shirts ↗Outer layers where lining, hardware, and weight count.
Open jackets ↗Bottoms that need waist, rise, and length context.
Open pants ↗Carry styles where size, interior, and hardware differ.
Open bags ↗Smaller add-ons where scale and detail need checking.
Open accessories ↗Sport and street pairs with shape and sizing detail.
Open sneakers ↗Visual comparisons for case, face, clasp, and scale.
Open watches ↗Warm-weather bottoms where rise, length, and fabric matter.
Open shorts ↗Smaller pieces where finish, shape, and sizing matter.
Open jewelry ↗Knitwear and lighter layers where cut and texture matter.
Open sweaters ↗A lovegobuy spreadsheet is useful when it helps you move from a broad list of links to a smaller shortlist. Start with the category, check photos, sizing, price context, and shipping weight, then continue only with rows that still make sense.
Start here
A broad lovegobuy sheet can mix footwear, clothing, bags, watches, and electronics in the same scroll. That makes a weak row look interesting simply because it is different from the row above it.
Category-first browsing gives you a fairer comparison. Two jackets can be checked for measurements and material clues; two pairs of shoes can be checked for profile, sole, and sizing. The questions become specific instead of vague.
Some users search by brand or model, but category-first browsing is cleaner and safer. Start with shoes, bags, watches, jackets, hoodies, or accessories, then inspect the external product details yourself.
A short routine
Name the kind of item and the questions that matter for it. That gives your browsing a boundary.
Judge like against like. A price, photo set, or size note becomes useful only beside reasonable alternatives.
Keep a row only if you can explain what evidence made it stronger than the nearby options.
The save test
A promising label is not evidence. The row should help you answer practical questions before it takes a place in your shortlist.
Score a spreadsheet rowSearch with a question
People arrive through phrases such as lovegobuy spreadsheet, lovegobuy links, or lovegobuy finds. A better second search adds what is missing: a source term such as Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian, or 1688; a category; QC photos; sizing; or shipping weight.
This form opens the Findsindex search page. Try a category plus one detail you need to verify.
Useful guides
Move from a one-line brief to three candidates, QC evidence, weight context, and a smaller shortlist.
Start the research workflow →Test the same category and a few real rows instead of judging a directory by its name or product count.
Open the comparison guide →Read how lovegobuy spreadsheets, source links, and rows fit together.
Open the main guide →Match each category with the photos and measurements worth checking.
Use the category guide →Use identity, construction, and fit-or-scale passes without treating photos as a guarantee.
Open the QC photo guide →Check the handoff between a row and its Taobao, Weidian, 1688, or Yupoo destination.
Open the source-link guide →Learn why weight can change the value of a spreadsheet find.
Read the weight guide →Use a seven-point check for photos, sizing, price context, source clarity, and weight.
Open the checklist →Spot vague rows, thin photos, missing sizes, and questionable external links.
Read the safety notes →Find careful answers about QC, source sites, converters, safety, and support.
Go to the FAQ →Before you move on
If you already know the category, open the matching Findsindex page. If you are still unsure, read the checklist first and keep the shortlist small.