Why categories matter
A shoe row can look detailed while omitting insole length. A jacket row can show every angle while saying nothing about sleeve length or lining. Category-first browsing keeps attention on evidence that can change the decision, not whichever photo happens to be most polished.
Use the cards below as working briefs. Each external link goes to a live CSSBuy category page currently exposed by the Findsindex CSSBuy hub; the cards do not guess at unsupported routes.
CSSBuy shoes
Use for boots, formal shoes, casual footwear, and broader shoe searches. Check profile, toe and heel shape, outsole, stitching, materials, size notes, and packaged weight.
Open shoes category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy sneakers
Compare shape from several angles. Look for insole length, outsole detail, heel alignment, paired views, consistent lighting, and useful size guidance.
Open sneakers category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy bags
Dimensions matter more than a single styled photo. Check base width, handle drop, strap range, closures, corners, lining, compartments, and empty weight.
Open bags category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy hoodies
Look for garment chest, shoulder, length, and sleeve measurements. Inspect cuffs, hood construction, zipper or print, interior, fabric description, and weight.
Open hoodies category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy shirts and T-shirts
Compare garment measurements rather than size labels alone. Check collar, seams, fabric opacity, print alignment, pattern matching, and care information.
Open shirts category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy sweaters
Check garment measurements, knit texture, ribbing, neckline, cuffs, hem, care wording, and whether the material description is specific enough to compare.
Open sweaters category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy jackets
Outerwear can be bulky. Check shell and lining, insulation, closures, pocket placement, sleeve and body length, garment measurements, and likely volume.
Open jackets category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy pants
Waist labels are not enough. Look for waist method, rise, inseam, thigh, leg opening, fabric stretch, pocket construction, and washing guidance.
Open pants category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy shorts
Check the waist measurement method, rise, inseam, leg opening, lining, pockets, fabric stretch, and whether the photos show the front and back clearly.
Open shorts category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy watches
Use dimensions and clear detail views. Inspect case, dial, crown, clasp, strap, stated materials, and any claims you would need an official channel to confirm.
Open watches category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy jewelry
Check length or ring dimensions, weight, clasp, finish, material wording, close-ups, and any skin-contact concern. Avoid judging scale from photos alone.
Open jewelry category on Findsindex ↗CSSBuy accessories
For glasses, headwear, belts, and small items, confirm dimensions, finish, included parts, compatibility, adjustment range, and whether the listing is specific.
Open accessories category on Findsindex ↗Some searches divide these families more finely. CSSBuy headwear needs circumference and adjustment-range checks; CSSBuy jerseys belong with shirts but need garment measurements, print or embroidery views, and number placement. Electronics remain a separate evidence problem: confirm model, plug, voltage, battery handling, included parts, support, and parcel restrictions before following a product result. Use a narrower phrase only when it changes what evidence you need.
Which category should you start with?
| If your question is about… | Start here | First evidence to seek |
|---|---|---|
| Fit around the foot | Shoes or sneakers | Insole length, shape, paired views, and sole detail |
| Garment fit | Hoodies, shirts, jackets, or pants | Garment measurements, fabric, and construction |
| Capacity or scale | Bags or accessories | Dimensions, compartments, and real-world scale |
| Specifications | Electronics | Compatibility, voltage, included parts, and restrictions |
| Small finish details | Watches, jewelry, or accessories | Close-ups, dimensions, materials, clasp, and surface finish |
Mistakes that make category browsing noisy
- Opening every row: this replaces comparison with tab management.
- Using popularity as evidence: attention does not answer sizing, photo, source, or weight questions.
- Trusting category labels without checking the destination: titles and links can drift apart.
- Searching too narrowly too soon: compare the product family before adding many style terms.
- Applying clothing checks to devices: each family has different information gaps.
Before an external page earns a click
- I know which category this row belongs to.
- I know the two or three details that could change my decision.
- I am ready to compare it with nearby finds, not in isolation.
- I will inspect the destination rather than relying on the card title.
- I have considered whether sizing, compatibility, or weight is the larger risk.
Sources and verification
Category destinations are mapped from the Findsindex CSSBuy directory ↗. The comparison prompts are editorial checklists, not product, seller, authenticity, or availability claims.