Search the need
Use a product type, name or source link.
Independent Orientdig browsing guide
Enter a product name, category or source link to open matching Findsindex results.
Search results are provided by Findsindex and open in a new tab. Orientdigshop does not sell or verify the listed products.
Use a product type, name or source link.
Review photos, sizing, price context and source.
Keep only finds with a clear reason.
Product sections
All category cards open Findsindex in a new tab. Use the spreadsheet checklist before saving a product.
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 spreadsheet is most helpful when its rows are easy to compare. Before saving anything, check when the list changed, open a few destinations and make sure the product details still match.
If you know the item, search for it directly. If you are still exploring, choose a category first so shoes, clothing, bags and electronics do not end up in the same comparison.
Be cautious with any list described as the “best” without a clear method. This guide explains what to compare and what still needs verification. If you are looking at a list for another service, use the shopping agent spreadsheet guide.
Broad spreadsheet searches mix products that need completely different checks. A bag, a hoodie and a watch cannot be judged by the same photo angles or weight assumptions. Category-first browsing makes comparisons fairer and easier to manage.
Choose what you want before opening rows. This prevents a catchy label from steering the decision.
Put similar items side by side so price, detail photos and sizing notes have context.
If the reason is only “popular” or “cheap,” check the photos, details and likely weight again.
A useful row reduces uncertainty. It does not need to answer everything, but it should give you enough evidence to know what to investigate next.
“Orientdig links” or “Orientdig finds” is broad. Add the thing you need to learn: a category, QC photos, sizing, an original source term or shipping weight.
An Orientdig Yupoo search may surface albums; Orientdig Taobao, Weidian or 1688 searches may point toward marketplace source links. A source label is context, not proof.
Try Orientdig QC photos when you need visual evidence, or add a size-chart phrase when fit is the unresolved question.
Orientdig shipping and weight searches can help you find estimation tools. Treat every calculator result as an estimate, not a quote.
Keep the search simple: use the platform name, the product category and one missing detail such as QC photos, measurements, source or weight.
Choose the page that covers the detail still missing from your shortlist.
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.