Start with the product type

Orientdig Spreadsheet Categories

Find the product type first, then use the details that actually matter for that category.

Choose by product typeChoose a category before you compare rows. The right details change by product type: shoes need profile and size evidence, bags need dimensions and interior views, while jackets need measurements, closures and bulk context.

Shop by type

Browse by category

Choose what you are looking for and go straight to the matching Findsindex section.

Category cards leave this independent guide and open Findsindex in a new tab. When a narrow directory is not confirmed, the card uses the closest clearly labelled parent category.

When an item fits more than one section

Choose the directory that matches the next question

Category boundaries are not always neat. A jacket can also look like a shirt, a small pouch can sit between bags and accessories, and a wearable device can overlap electronics and watches. Choose the starting directory by the detail you need to compare, then move only if the results are consistently mismatched.

Start with construction for clothing

Use tops when fit, neckline and garment measurements are the main questions. Use outerwear when lining, closures, layering room and packed bulk matter more. A matching set should be compared by its main garment first, with the included pieces recorded separately.

Start with function for footwear

Choose shoes for a broad footwear comparison and sneakers when sole shape, upper construction and athletic sizing are central. Slippers and casual footwear may remain in the broader directory if a narrower page does not provide enough comparable results.

Use scale to separate bags and accessories

A carry item belongs with bags when capacity, interior layout, straps and empty weight drive the decision. Small goods belong with accessories when dimensions, fastening, finish and included pieces are the more useful checks.

Use specifications for electronic items

Wearable items may resemble watches or accessories, but specifications, ports, compatibility, battery information and responsible support channels make electronics the better starting point. Appearance photos alone do not answer functional questions.

If two directories remain plausible, open both parent categories and compare the first few relevant results. Keep the route that produces clearer, more consistent evidence rather than the route with the most listings.

Which category should you start with?

Start with the item you can describe without a brand name. “Light jacket with a zip” is a cleaner starting point than a string of model terms. If the product spans two categories, choose the page whose checklist matches the item’s main use.

For apparel, begin with measurements. For footwear, begin with sizing method and multiple angles. For bags and accessories, begin with dimensions, hardware and material detail. For electronics, specifications and official support requirements matter more than a spreadsheet label.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Opening every row before narrowing the item type.
  • Treating a category label as proof that the destination matches.
  • Comparing headline prices without weight or shipping context.
  • Saving a row because it is popular when the photos are vague.
  • Inventing a category URL instead of using a known parent page.

Checklist before opening external pages

  • The category matches the item shown and the source title.
  • You know which detail you need from the next page.
  • You are prepared to compare at least two similar finds.
  • You will leave the row behind if photos or measurements stay unclear.