Face shape guide

The 7 Face Shapes, Explained Clearly

Face shape is a practical styling shortcut based on visible proportions—not a rigid rule or beauty score. Compare the seven common categories, then use glasses and hairstyle guides to turn the result into a useful shortlist.

Compare proportions

Look at length and the widest zones—not body weight or one isolated feature.

Allow mixed shapes

A primary and secondary type is often more honest than a forced label.

Shortlist frames

Use shape to narrow options, then validate scale with virtual try-on.

Choose hairstyles

Use volume, length, texture, and parting to create the effect you want.

Compare all seven face shapes

Start with the broad outline, then open the detailed guide to compare measurements, commonly confused shapes, eyewear, and hairstyles.

Oval face

How to identify the Oval face shape

A face that is slightly longer than it is wide, with balanced proportions and a softly tapered jaw.

Round face

How to identify the Round face shape

A face with similar visible width and length, fuller cheeks, and a gently curved jawline.

Square face

How to identify the Square face shape

A face with a broad forehead, a strong jaw, and similar width through the upper and lower face.

Heart face

How to identify the Heart face shape

A face with more width through the forehead or upper cheeks and a noticeably narrower, often pointed chin.

Diamond face

How to identify the Diamond face shape

A face where the cheekbones are the dominant width, with a narrower forehead and jaw.

Oblong face

How to identify the Oblong face shape

A face that is noticeably longer than it is wide, with relatively consistent width from forehead to jaw.

Triangle face

How to identify the Triangle face shape

A face with a jawline wider than the forehead, creating an outline that becomes broader toward the bottom.

Compare commonly confused face shapes

When two categories seem close, compare the widest point, side outline, and jaw structure instead of relying on one length ratio.

Measure your proportions manually

Use face shape as a starting point

These categories describe visible styling proportions. They do not determine beauty, prescription needs, frame size, or physical comfort. Try the actual frame on your own photo before making a buying decision.

Face shape FAQ

What are the seven common face shapes?

The seven commonly used styling categories are oval, round, square, heart, diamond, oblong, and triangle. Many people sit between two categories rather than matching one perfectly.

How can I find my face shape?

Use a straight-on photo with a neutral expression, then compare face length, forehead width, cheekbone width, jaw width, and jaw curvature. Hair should be pulled away from the outline when possible.

Can my face be a mix of two shapes?

Yes. Face-shape categories are styling shortcuts, not medical diagnoses. A primary and secondary shape often describes real proportions better than a forced single label.