Set the product context
Decide whether you are evaluating fit, structure, finish, weight or another category-specific detail.
Independent Orientdig spreadsheet search guide
Search by product name, category or source link. Results open on Findsindex; compare photos, sizing, price context and shipping weight before saving a row.
Opens Findsindex in a new tab. This guide does not collect account or order data.
Start with one product type or paste a relevant source link.
Compare QC photos, measurements, price context and weight.
Save only rows with a clear reason, then verify external details.
Independent guide only—no sales, orders, shipping, seller verification, or affiliation with Orientdig or Findsindex.
Pick a section
Open the Findsindex product directory that matches what you want to compare first.
Shape, sizing and sole details
Open directory →Measurements, fabric and print
Open directory →Fit, cuffs and fabric weight
Open directory →Lining, closures and volume
Open directory →Waist, rise and inseam
Open directory →Dimensions, hardware and weight
Open directory →Profile, stitching and insole
Open directory →Dimensions, clasp and details
Open directory →Scale, finish and inclusions
Open directory →Specs, plugs and limitations
Open category →Waist, length and material
Open directory →Return to the full Orientdig hub
Browse all finds →External category cards open the corresponding Findsindex directory in a new tab. For product-specific checks, use the full category guide.
An Orientdig 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.
A better first filter
A mixed sheet puts shoes beside bags, jackets and electronics. That makes every price and photo set look more persuasive than it is. Choose one product type, compare like with like, and the missing details become easier to spot.
Decide whether you are evaluating fit, structure, finish, weight or another category-specific detail.
Three similar rows reveal more than one isolated link. Look for differences in photos, measurements and source clarity.
Save a row because it answers your questions, not because its label is loud or its price is unusually low.
Three passes, not endless tabs
Start with the product type and decide which photos or measurements should exist.
Read rows side by side. Isolate price, photo quality, size detail and source relevance.
If you cannot say why a find survived the comparison, it probably does not belong on the shortlist.
The save test
Search with a question
“Orientdig spreadsheet” is a starting phrase. Add the missing question: are you looking for Orientdig links, a category, a source such as Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian or 1688, QC photos, or shipping context? The added detail matters more than repeating the service name.
This form submits your wording to the Findsindex search page in a new tab.
Continue inside the guide
How to read an Orientdig sheet row and decide when a source term matters.
Seven checks for photos, sizing, context, weight and row quality.
Why item and packaging weight can change the whole comparison.
Practical red flags and limits of third-party spreadsheet links.
Direct answers about spreadsheets, QC, converters, legitimacy and support.
What Orientdig Finds is, what it is not, and how external links are handled.
Practical reading
These are not generic purchase instructions. Each article gives you a repeatable way to reduce uncertainty before opening more tabs.
7-step workflow
Turn a search phrase or source URL into a small, documented comparison set.
Read the workflow →Photo evidence
A five-pass method for checking identity, shape, construction, measurements and missing views.
Read the QC guide →Side-by-side comparison
Use known, unknown and missing evidence to choose what deserves more research.
Read the comparison guide →Links from another service
See what changes when the same product link is shared under another shopping service name.
Read the names guide →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.