It belongs
The category and item description agree, so the comparison is not misleading.
Search products on Findsindex, then compare photos, sizing, source details, price context, and shipping weight before you keep a row.
Search results open on Findsindex in a new tab. Check the live listing before saving any find.
Start with the product type
Check photos, sizing, and weight
Save only rows you can explain
WegoBuy Finds is an independent browsing guide for WegoBuy spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent WegoBuy or Findsindex.
Jump from this guide to the matching Findsindex product directory, then inspect the live details yourself.
All directory cards open Findsindex in a new tab. For product-specific checks, use the complete category guide.
A WegoBuy 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.
The goal is not more tabs. It is a clearer reason for every row you keep.
Decide which product type you are comparing. That sets the right photo, sizing, and weight questions.
Two or three comparable rows reveal more than one isolated price or a dramatic label.
Write down what makes the row useful and what still needs checking. If you cannot, remove it for now.
A row earns a place on the shortlist through useful evidence. Popularity, a low number, or a vague “good quality” note does not do that work.
The category and item description agree, so the comparison is not misleading.
QC photos show the angles and details that matter for that product type.
Sizing, measurements, or fit notes are visible where they are needed.
The price is compared with similar WegoBuy finds, not judged on its own.
Likely shipping weight is considered before the item looks like good value.
Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian, or 1688 context supports the research instead of replacing it.
A plain “WegoBuy spreadsheet” search is a reasonable starting point. Add one useful constraint when the results are too broad: a category, a source term, or the evidence you need.
Add the detail that matches your problem. Use a source name such as Yupoo or Taobao when you are tracing where a row came from, “QC photos” when you need closer images, or “shipping weight” when cost is the open question. Broad words such as “links” or “finds” work better when paired with the product type.
Weidian and 1688 can also appear as original-link clues. They identify a source environment, not a guarantee about the row.
Learn how to refine a WegoBuy search →Use a neutral category or product term. The result opens on Findsindex; review the live page yourself.
External search results open in a new tab. This site does not control or verify those results.
Each guide answers a different question, from what a WegoBuy sheet means to whether a saved row has enough evidence.
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.