Independent spreadsheet finder · 2026

Allchinabuy Spreadsheet Finds, Without the Endless Scroll

Search products, categories or source links on Findsindex, then use this guide to check photos, sizing, price context and shipping weight.

Search results open on Findsindex in a new tab. Try “hoodie”, “shoes”, “QC photos” or paste a source link.

Category-first browsing
QC and sizing checks
Weight-aware shortlists

Allchinabuyshop is an independent browsing guide for Allchinabuy spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent Allchinabuy or Findsindex.

Product directory

Browse by category

Pick a product type first, then inspect the Findsindex results with the right questions in mind.

Each card opens the matching Findsindex product category directly. Headwear opens the verified Hats category, while More finds opens the complete category directory. For comparison advice, read the full category guide.

Start here

An Allchinabuy 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 three-pass method

How to use this site

Pick the category first

Decide what kind of item you are researching before opening a wall of unrelated links.

Compare similar finds

Put two or three plausible rows side by side. Differences in photos, measurements and weight become obvious.

Save only with a reason

“Clear measurements and useful photos” is a reason. Popularity, hype or an unusually low number is not enough.

Less scrolling, more signal

Why start with a category?

A mixed spreadsheet makes a jacket compete with a watch and a pair of shoes. That comparison tells you almost nothing. Category-first browsing gives every row a sensible neighbour.

Once the product type is fixed, useful questions become easier: do shoe photos show the sole? Does a hoodie row include measurements? Is the bag’s hardware visible? Is a heavy jacket still attractive after you consider packed weight?

Some users search by brand or model, but category-first browsing is cleaner and safer. Start with shoes, bags, watches, jackets, hoodies, or accessories, then inspect the external product details yourself.

The save test

What makes a row worth saving?

A strong row answers at least one practical question. It does not need to be perfect, but it should give you something concrete to check.

  • The category matches what you intended to browse.
  • Photos show details that matter for that product type.
  • Sizing, measurements or fit notes appear where needed.
  • Price is compared with similar rows, not judged alone.
  • Estimated shipping weight is part of the decision.
  • Source clues point somewhere relevant rather than merely sounding technical.
  • The row has a clear reason to survive the shortlist.

Score a row with the seven-point checklist →

Search ideas

Search for the detail you are missing

Start with the product type. If a row looks plausible but leaves a question open, add that question: “hoodie measurements”, “shoe sole photos”, “bag dimensions” or “original link”. Names such as Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian and 1688 can explain where information came from, but the current page still needs checking.

Explore useful search patterns

Narrow the search one step at a time

If the first results are too broad, add one useful detail rather than a string of extra words. You should be able to say what the new word is meant to uncover.

For photo checks and shipping questions, use the QC checklist and weight guide rather than trusting a tool label by itself.

Keep the shortlist small

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.