835 catalogued sites across 22 sections — a curator's index of the open web.
Submit any legitimate web property to the catalogue. Listings are reviewed editorially and confirmed without charge. No fee — all submissions are accepted free of charge.
+ File a cardEphemera7 is a curated web index cataloguing 835 sites across 22 subject sections. It is maintained as a reference resource for visitors seeking to discover web services, compare providers, or simply browse the open web in an organised way.
Yes. Submission to the Ephemera7 index is free of charge. Sites are reviewed before being confirmed, and the index is updated as new listings are accepted.
Sites in the Ephemera7 index are arranged across 22 subject sections, each covering a distinct field — from health and legal services to travel, technology, and print works. Visitors can browse any section directly or use the site navigation to explore the full catalogue.
To submit a site, visit the Add a Site page, enter your web address, choose the most appropriate subject section, and provide a brief description. Your submission will be reviewed and added to the index upon confirmation.
The Ephemera7 index is maintained by the site's curators, who review submissions, manage section classifications, and keep the catalogue accurate and up to date.
If you notice an error in a catalogued entry — an outdated address, an incorrect description, or a misfiled section — please use the contact details on the About page to notify the curators. Corrections are applied promptly.
The index currently holds 835 catalogued entries. New submissions are reviewed regularly, and the catalogue grows as additional sites are accepted.
Ephemera7 is a curated index of 835 web entries, organised across 22 subject sections and maintained with the care one might give to any considered collection. Each listing has been catalogued for its relevance to its section, with entries spanning health providers and legal services, digital agencies and travel operators, print works and scholastic institutions. The index takes its name from the tradition of collecting ephemera — the printed or digital artefacts of everyday life that might otherwise pass unnoticed — and applies that sensibility to the web itself. Visitors to Ephemera7 are invited to browse by section or search for a specific type of service; the index is structured to support both deliberate research and unhurried discovery. Submission to the index is free, and listings are reviewed before being confirmed in the catalogue.