Shape from several angles
Look for both side profiles, toe, heel, sole, interior sizing, and a level view. One dramatic angle can hide proportion problems.
Seven checks are enough to expose most weak rows. Work through them before a polished image or low number turns a maybe into a plan.
Save a Lovegobuy spreadsheet row only when the item fits your category, the photos answer real questions, the sizing and recorded price make sense, and you have considered packed weight. Six or seven checks means keep it; four or five means fill the gaps; three or fewer means step back.
Tick only what the row or its current destination actually supports. Do not award a point because the information might appear later.
A score helps you sort rows; it does not guarantee the item. A serious red flag can still remove a high-scoring row.
Lovegobuy QC photos, quality-check photos, and warehouse photos matter only when they belong to the right item and show the areas most likely to have a problem.
Look for both side profiles, toe, heel, sole, interior sizing, and a level view. One dramatic angle can hide proportion problems.
Check garment width and length, shoulders, collar, seams, print or embroidery placement, and fabric under neutral light.
A ruler photo needs clear endpoints. Waist, rise, inseam, thigh, and leg opening should match the way the size chart is written.
Ask for base, corners, handles, hardware, closure, lining, pockets, and dimensions. Shape alone does not show usable capacity.
Use front, side, clasp, and measured views. Harsh or colored light can hide the finish you are trying to judge.
Photos should match the stated model and included parts. Specifications, plug, battery, and compatibility still require current written confirmation.
A Lovegobuy QC finder, QC photo finder, or QC checker can help locate images, but it cannot show that the images belong to the exact listing unless the source item number matches.
Fit searches need numbers too. A Lovegobuy size guide can explain which measurements to collect, while a Lovegobuy sizing search may help you find item-specific charts or user notes. Use the same measurement method, photo angles, price date, and packed-weight assumptions for every item you compare.
The difference is not fancy wording. It is whether the row gives you comparable, category-specific information.
Item: heavyweight zip hoodie.
The category fits; front, back, cuffs, zipper, and fabric close-ups are visible; garment measurements explain chest width and length; the price is similar to two comparable rows; estimated weight is noted; the title is specific.
Missing point: you still need to confirm whether the measurement tolerance fits your plan.
Item: “best hoodie.”
The image appears to show a hoodie and the price is visible. There is no usable size chart, no construction detail, no likely packed weight, no original-link explanation, and the title supplies the only reason to care.
What to do: remove it until the missing details appear.
Save the row only if you can finish this sentence: “I am keeping this because ___, and the next thing I need to check is ___.”
If the first blank becomes “it looks good” or “people like it,” the row needs more work. If the second blank is empty, you may be treating unfinished research as certainty.
Keep a high-scoring row, search for the missing detail on a middle score, and remove a weak row before opening more tabs.