Length vs width
Vertical length is more pronounced than on an oval face.
Oblong face shape guide
A face that is noticeably longer than it is wide, with relatively consistent width from forehead to jaw.
Oblong faces are led by vertical length. The sides may appear straighter, and the forehead, cheekbones, and jaw often remain closer in width than on tapered heart or triangle faces.
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.
Vertical length is more pronounced than on an oval face.
The outline tends to stay relatively parallel through much of the face.
No single horizontal zone usually dominates dramatically.
Break up continuous vertical length and introduce useful width or depth around the sides of the face.
More lens depth and visible frame presence interrupt the vertical line and add proportionate scale.
Side volume, texture, and a fringe can divide the long outline into balanced sections without hiding the face.
A face that is noticeably longer than it is wide, with relatively consistent width from forehead to jaw. Compare face length, forehead, cheekbones, jaw width, and jaw curvature together rather than relying on one feature.
Deep rectangular frames, Oversized frames, Browline frames, Statement frames are useful starting points. Frame width and lens depth still need to be checked on your own photo.
Shoulder-length waves, Textured bob, Curtain bangs, Layered cuts with side volume are practical options. Texture, hair type, maintenance, and personal preference matter as much as face shape.