Cheek prominence
The cheek width should exceed both the forehead and jaw, not just one of them.
Diamond face shape guide
A face where the cheekbones are the dominant width, with a narrower forehead and jaw.
Diamond faces have a distinct middle-face emphasis. The outline widens toward the cheekbones and then narrows both upward toward the temples and downward toward the chin.
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.
The cheek width should exceed both the forehead and jaw, not just one of them.
The temples are narrower than the cheekbones, unlike many heart-shaped faces.
The lower outline narrows rather than remaining broad or square.
Connect the narrow forehead and jaw to the cheekbones with gentle width, curves, or controlled volume.
Gentle width near the eyes can bridge a narrower forehead while curved lines avoid adding another hard angle at the cheekbones.
Balanced volume above or below the cheekbones makes the whole outline feel connected while preserving its distinctive structure.
A face where the cheekbones are the dominant width, with a narrower forehead and jaw. Compare face length, forehead, cheekbones, jaw width, and jaw curvature together rather than relying on one feature.
Oval frames, Rimless frames, Cat-eye frames, Browline frames are useful starting points. Frame width and lens depth still need to be checked on your own photo.
Chin-length bob, Side part with soft fringe, Shoulder-length waves, Pixie with temple volume are practical options. Texture, hair type, maintenance, and personal preference matter as much as face shape.