How to read QC photos without filling in the gaps
Learn which angles matter by category, how to compare two photo sets and when missing evidence should stop a save.
Read the QC photo guide →Independent Hoobuy spreadsheet guide
Search a product name or paste a Taobao, Weidian, 1688 or Yupoo link. Results open directly on Findsindex.
Hoobuy Shoes is an independent browsing guide. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent Hoobuy or Findsindex.
Product directory
Choose the product type you actually need. Every card opens the matching Findsindex directory in a new tab.
Practical reading
Use these articles when a row looks interesting but the photos, size, source link or browsing format still needs a closer look.
Learn which angles matter by category, how to compare two photo sets and when missing evidence should stop a save.
Read the QC photo guide →Use a garment you already own, check the measurement method and avoid treating familiar letters as universal sizes.
Read the sizing guide →See what each source term tells you, what it does not prove and how to spot a destination that no longer matches the row.
Read the source-link guide →Compare the strengths of a sheet and a product directory, then use both without opening dozens of weak or repeated rows.
Compare the two formats →See what common buying-agent labels usually mean and which details still need checking before you save a product link.
Read the platform guide →Start here
A Hoobuy 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.
Read the complete spreadsheet guide →A three-step habit
Define what you are comparing before opening broad Hoobuy links. Similar items expose missing details faster.
One row can look strong alone. Place it beside alternatives and ask which photos, sizing and source clues are actually clearer.
Keep a row only if you can explain why it survived the comparison. Hype and a vague label are not reasons.
A useful row
Category fit is the first filter. Then the row needs enough information to support a decision: useful photos, sizing or measurements where relevant, price in context, a sensible weight expectation and source clues that match the item.
A good row does not need to promise perfection. It needs to reduce uncertainty.
Search ideas
Begin with the product you want, then add the detail that matters to your next decision. A source name is useful when you need to inspect the original listing, while a photo or shipping term is useful when evidence or delivery is the real concern.
Brand or model wording can narrow a search, but it should not replace product checks. Choose a neutral category first, compare similar rows, and inspect the destination details before treating any name as useful evidence.
Choose a more precise search →Keep reading
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.