Start with a question, not the whole gallery
“Does this look good?” is too broad. Ask something you can actually answer: “Can I confirm the selected color, read the garment width, see both shoe profiles, or inspect the bag closure?”
Write one main question and two smaller ones before you zoom in. A polished overall photo should not distract you from a missing size, option, or construction detail.
- AskName the detail that could change your choice.
- InspectFind the angle or measurement that could answer it.
- RecordMark it as visible, uncertain, or missing.
Know which kind of image you are viewing
Spreadsheets and directories may place several image types close together. They serve different purposes, so label them before comparing details.
Listing images
Presentation-led images used to describe or market an item. They can show the intended design but may not represent the exact unit or option.
Album images
Additional seller or catalog photos. They may reveal more angles, but still need to be matched to the current variation.
QC or warehouse photos
Images associated with a received item at a particular point in time. They can show visible details but do not guarantee material, fit, function, or another order.
Measurement photos
Images that place a ruler or tape against the item. Check the starting point, angle, unit, and whether the garment is stretched or laid naturally.
Packaging photos
Useful for included parts, boxes, protection, and potential parcel bulk. They do not replace product-detail images.
Community photos
Helpful context when the option and date are clear. A different size, batch, seller, or lighting setup may limit the comparison.
Review the QC photos in five passes
- Item and option. Check the product type, color, size, variation, and included parts. If the option is unclear, stop there.
- Useful angles. Count questions answered, not photos. Front, back, side, base, interior, label, closure, and measurement views matter differently for each product.
- Shape and construction. Look at proportion, alignment, seams, edges, hardware, closures, and visible assembly. Compare similar camera angles.
- Readable measurements. Make sure you can see the numbers, units, and start and end points. A ruler in the frame is not enough when either endpoint is hidden.
- What is still missing. List what the photos cannot show, such as exact color, material feel, function, long-term durability, fit, or an obscured area.
Use category-specific photo questions
The same gallery should not be judged with a universal checklist. Start with the closest product type.
Swipe the table horizontally to see every column.
| Category | Priority views | Measurement context | Common blind spot |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shoes | Both profiles, toe, heel, outsole, interior label | Size marking and, where available, usable length guidance | Judging symmetry from two different camera angles |
| T-shirts and hoodies | Front, back, seams, cuffs, hem, print or embroidery | Width and length with clear endpoints | Assuming a size label equals a familiar fit |
| Jackets | Closures, lining, cuffs, pockets, hardware, full silhouette | Chest, length, sleeve, shoulder where relevant | Missing bulk and packed-volume context |
| Pants and shorts | Waist, rise, legs, pockets, closures, fabric surface | Waist, inseam or outseam, rise, leg opening | Reading a curved or stretched tape as exact |
| Bags | All sides, base, interior, zipper, straps, attachment points | Width, height, depth, strap range | No scale reference or hidden interior structure |
| Accessories and electronics | All components, connectors, surfaces, labels, model details | Dimensions and compatibility identifiers | Inferring function, battery safety, or compatibility from appearance |
For electronics, batteries, and compatibility, use official specifications and safety information. Photos can confirm visible ports or included parts; they cannot establish every technical or regulatory requirement.
Color and material have hard photo limits
Warehouse lighting, white balance, exposure, screen settings, compression, and surrounding colors can all shift appearance. Compare multiple images under the same lighting and look for consistent relationships, but avoid claiming an exact shade from one frame.
Texture can suggest weave, nap, grain, or surface finish when a close-up is sharp. It cannot prove composition, softness, durability, water resistance, or other material claims. Those require reliable specifications or appropriate testing.
How to read measurement photos
- Confirm the unit before recording the number.
- Check whether the tape begins at zero and whether the starting edge is visible.
- Notice whether the item is flat, curved, compressed, or stretched.
- Use the same measurement method for every comparison.
- Compare garment measurements with a similar item you already own—not only with body measurements or a generic size chart.
- Record a small uncertainty range when the endpoint is angled or partly hidden instead of inventing precision.
A single measurement rarely answers fit. For a top, width without length may be incomplete. For pants, waist without rise or inseam may hide the shape that matters. The right set depends on the item and your reason for comparing it.
Translate QC searches into a precise request
A Kakobuy QC checklist should change with the product. A Kakobuy shoe QC request needs profiles, toe, heel, sole, interior label, and usable size evidence; a Kakobuy clothing QC request usually needs seams, print or embroidery, cuffs, hem, and readable garment dimensions.
Searches for Kakobuy warehouse photos or Kakobuy extra QC photos often mean that a standard gallery did not answer the key question. Ask for the missing view by name. If the problem is fit, compare Kakobuy measurements with a familiar garment instead of treating a generic Kakobuy size chart as proof.
Continue, request clarification, or remove?
Continue researching
- Option identity is clear
- Key angles are present
- Measurements use readable endpoints
- Visible construction answers your main question
- Remaining uncertainty is acceptable and recorded
Pause or remove
- Images may show another variation
- Repeated angles avoid the key detail
- Measurement method is unreadable
- Important included parts are missing
- You are filling gaps with optimistic assumptions
If the relevant service offers additional-photo or clarification options, ask for one precise view rather than “more photos.” Name the side, detail, reference point, and measurement method you need. Availability and terms belong to that service, not to Kako Buy.
Write one short photo note
Long descriptions are difficult to compare. Keep one compact note beside each row:
Example: “Confirmed navy medium, front/back and 56 cm width; sleeve length missing; compare only with rows that show both width and sleeve.”
The note separates what you saw from what you still need and makes an old row easier to check again later.
What to do after the photo review
Reopen the product link, compare the same option with similar finds, review the size and likely parcel weight, and keep the unanswered question beside the row.