Length vs width
Look for moderate vertical length rather than an extreme long or short proportion.
Oval face shape guide
A face that is slightly longer than it is wide, with balanced proportions and a softly tapered jaw.
Oval faces usually have no single width zone that overwhelms the others. The cheekbones may be the widest point, while the forehead and jaw taper gently rather than ending in sharp corners.
Use a straight-on image with a neutral expression. Pull hair away from the outline and compare proportions, not millimeters taken from an uncalibrated photo.
Look for moderate vertical length rather than an extreme long or short proportion.
They are often the widest area, but not dramatically wider than the forehead.
The jaw narrows gradually and has no pronounced square corner.
Preserve the natural balance and choose scale deliberately instead of trying to correct the outline.
Oval proportions support many frame shapes, so brow alignment, width, and lens depth are more useful filters than a rigid shape rule.
Because the outline is already balanced, hairstyle choice can focus on texture, maintenance, and feature emphasis rather than correction.
A face that is slightly longer than it is wide, with balanced proportions and a softly tapered jaw. Compare face length, forehead, cheekbones, jaw width, and jaw curvature together rather than relying on one feature.
Balanced rectangular frames, Browline frames, Aviators, Classic square frames are useful starting points. Frame width and lens depth still need to be checked on your own photo.
Collarbone layers, Textured bob, Soft curtain bangs, Long waves with balanced volume are practical options. Texture, hair type, maintenance, and personal preference matter as much as face shape.