ABSCHRIFTEnglish

Finding Your Perfect Hairstyle Is Surprisingly Easy

4m 26s957 Wörter156 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

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You've probably done this before,

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looking for a new hairstyle, you come

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across a guide and it tells you to

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identify your face shape. You follow the

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recommendation exactly, but it still

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doesn't look how you wanted. The

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problem, against common belief, your

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face shape is almost irrelevant and way

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too unspecific. What actually matters

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are your individual facial features. And

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once you understand the four that matter

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most, choosing the perfect hairstyle

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becomes surprisingly easy. The first and

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most important feature are your facial

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thirds. Research shows that facial

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thirds determine perceived

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attractiveness more than almost any

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other proportional feature. This is the

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exact principle professional hair

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stylists use to correct imbalances. For

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example, if you have a small, narrow

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upper third, expose it, don't cover it.

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Bad Bunny demonstrates this perfectly

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where he consistently wears his

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hairstyled upward and away from his

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forehead, making his compact upper third

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appear larger and more balanced. But

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here's where it gets interesting. Look

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at actor Omar Aayus. He also has a

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narrow upper third, but when he wears

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downward styles that cover his forehead,

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his face looks compressed and bottom

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heavy. Now look at this morph where we

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expose his forehead. The proportions

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immediately improve because we're no

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longer hiding an already small feature.

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Now, if you have a large, wide upper

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third, the opposite applies. Chris Briny

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is the perfect example. He has a

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prominent forehead, so when he wears

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forward styled hair or bangs, it

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visually reduces that area and creates

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balance. Paul Mscal's case is even more

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specific. His slightly receding hairline

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makes his upper third wider than his

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midface, which is why forward styled

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hair with textured bangs work so well in

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him. It's not just about covering

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height. It's also about reducing

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perceived width. And if your upper,

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middle, and lower thirds are already

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balanced and proportional, you have the

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most flexibility. You can pull off slick

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backs, medium length flows, and mid

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parts equally well. Okay, so another

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crucial feature you need to understand

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is your facial symmetry. And this one is

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counterintuitive. The more asymmetrical

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your face is, the more asymmetrical your

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hairstyle needs to be. Most men assume

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symmetrical hairstyles, clean middle

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parts, perfectly balanced buzz cuts,

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always look better. But that only works

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if your face is already symmetrical.

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Look at this comparison of Andrew

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Garfield. On the left, a relatively

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balanced face. On the right, the same

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face with a clean middle part. Notice

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how the slight unevenness around the

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eyes and jaw suddenly becomes more

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visible. A symmetrical hairstyle creates

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a visual reference point. And when your

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face deviates from that symmetry, it

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stands out. Timothy Charm's face, like

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most, has subtle asymmetry. If you

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mirror his face, the structural

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unevenness becomes clear. But he

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consistently wears messy textured hair

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with irregular volume because it

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prevents your eye from locking onto his

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structural asymmetry. Now compare that

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to someone like Brad Pitt where during

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his career he pulled off nearly every

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single hairstyle out there just because

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of his highly balanced facial structure.

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Clean symmetrical hairstyles emphasized

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his natural balance rather than exposing

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any deviations. The third feature is

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your vertical face length. And the

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principle here is quite simple. Your

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hairstyles vertical silhouette should

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counterbalance your face length. If you

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have a long face, you need horizontal

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emphasis. Flat styles, sides swept hair,

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anything that reduces vertical height.

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Adding volume on top will only make your

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face look even longer. Look at Adam

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Driver. He has an elongated face, which

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is why he almost exclusively wears his

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hair flat or sides swept. You never see

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him with a quiff or high volume on top.

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It would exaggerate his facial

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proportions because it makes the face

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immediately look stretched and

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unbalanced. But if you have a short,

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more compressed face, the opposite would

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apply. You need vertical emphasis to add

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height. Bruno Mars is famous for his

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long afro, but it doesn't just look

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cool, it also adds volume and height,

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elongating his facial proportions. And

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even when he's not wearing the afro,

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like here, he usually goes for upward

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styled hairstyles because short styles

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like a buzzcut would draw focus to a

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slightly compressed face. On the other

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hand, if your face is balanced

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vertically like Robert Patterson, you

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have complete flexibility. High volume

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styles, flat styles, slick back looks,

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all of them generally work because there

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is no vertical imbalance to correct. The

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fourth and final feature will determine

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if you can pull off a buzz cut, which is

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your jaw projection. Short hair,

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especially buzz cuts, remove all

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distraction from the lower third.

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There's nothing to soften and redirect

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attention making your jaw the focal

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point. Streamer Marlon Ludrin Garcia

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became known for his buzzcut. His jaw is

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angular, well projected and defined. So

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removing hair draws more attention to

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that particular feature. Another famous

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example is Jeremy Meeks. His short hair

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emphasized his facial structure, eyes,

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and especially his jawline so

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dramatically that his mug shot went

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viral, launching his career as a

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professional model. On the other hand,

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if your joy is softer like Austin

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Butler's, short hair also exposes that.

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In those cases, messy textured styles

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work better because they create visual

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distraction. Take a look at this morph.

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A buzz cut would shift all focus to his

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lower third, which isn't his strongest

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feature. Once you understand these four

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features, you realize why someone like

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Brad Pitt was able to pull off

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practically any hairstyle throughout his

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career, while another individual with

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the exact same face shape could not. So,

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forget what the face shape chart says.

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And if you want us to analyze your face,

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head over to goo.com.

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