Forehead vs jaw
The jaw should visibly exceed the forehead width.
Triangle face shape guide
A face with a jawline wider than the forehead, creating an outline that becomes broader toward the bottom.
Triangle, sometimes called pear, is the inverse width pattern of a heart-shaped face. The temples or forehead are narrower, while the jaw carries the strongest horizontal width.
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 jaw should visibly exceed the forehead width.
They may be broad, but usually do not exceed the jaw as they do on diamond faces.
The face narrows upward rather than downward.
Add presence near the brows and temples while keeping the strong jaw from carrying all visual weight.
A stronger upper line adds visual presence near a narrower forehead and balances a broader jaw.
Upper-face volume and lighter ends redistribute attention upward while allowing the jawline to remain a strong feature.
A face with a jawline wider than the forehead, creating an outline that becomes broader toward the bottom. Compare face length, forehead, cheekbones, jaw width, and jaw curvature together rather than relying on one feature.
Browline frames, Cat-eye frames, Aviators, Frames with a defined upper rim are useful starting points. Frame width and lens depth still need to be checked on your own photo.
Layered cuts with temple volume, Textured pixie, Side-swept bangs, Waves beginning above the jaw are practical options. Texture, hair type, maintenance, and personal preference matter as much as face shape.