Finding Your Perfect Hairstyle Is Surprisingly Easy
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You've probably done this before,
looking for a new hairstyle, you come
across a guide and it tells you to
identify your face shape. You follow the
recommendation exactly, but it still
doesn't look how you wanted. The
problem, against common belief, your
face shape is almost irrelevant and way
too unspecific. What actually matters
are your individual facial features. And
once you understand the four that matter
most, choosing the perfect hairstyle
becomes surprisingly easy. The first and
most important feature are your facial
thirds. Research shows that facial
thirds determine perceived
attractiveness more than almost any
other proportional feature. This is the
exact principle professional hair
stylists use to correct imbalances. For
example, if you have a small, narrow
upper third, expose it, don't cover it.
Bad Bunny demonstrates this perfectly
where he consistently wears his
hairstyled upward and away from his
forehead, making his compact upper third
appear larger and more balanced. But
here's where it gets interesting. Look
at actor Omar Aayus. He also has a
narrow upper third, but when he wears
downward styles that cover his forehead,
his face looks compressed and bottom
heavy. Now look at this morph where we
expose his forehead. The proportions
immediately improve because we're no
longer hiding an already small feature.
Now, if you have a large, wide upper
third, the opposite applies. Chris Briny
is the perfect example. He has a
prominent forehead, so when he wears
forward styled hair or bangs, it
visually reduces that area and creates
balance. Paul Mscal's case is even more
specific. His slightly receding hairline
makes his upper third wider than his
midface, which is why forward styled
hair with textured bangs work so well in
him. It's not just about covering
height. It's also about reducing
perceived width. And if your upper,
middle, and lower thirds are already
balanced and proportional, you have the
most flexibility. You can pull off slick
backs, medium length flows, and mid
parts equally well. Okay, so another
crucial feature you need to understand
is your facial symmetry. And this one is
counterintuitive. The more asymmetrical
your face is, the more asymmetrical your
hairstyle needs to be. Most men assume
symmetrical hairstyles, clean middle
parts, perfectly balanced buzz cuts,
always look better. But that only works
if your face is already symmetrical.
Look at this comparison of Andrew
Garfield. On the left, a relatively
balanced face. On the right, the same
face with a clean middle part. Notice
how the slight unevenness around the
eyes and jaw suddenly becomes more
visible. A symmetrical hairstyle creates
a visual reference point. And when your
face deviates from that symmetry, it
stands out. Timothy Charm's face, like
most, has subtle asymmetry. If you
mirror his face, the structural
unevenness becomes clear. But he
consistently wears messy textured hair
with irregular volume because it
prevents your eye from locking onto his
structural asymmetry. Now compare that
to someone like Brad Pitt where during
his career he pulled off nearly every
single hairstyle out there just because
of his highly balanced facial structure.
Clean symmetrical hairstyles emphasized
his natural balance rather than exposing
any deviations. The third feature is
your vertical face length. And the
principle here is quite simple. Your
hairstyles vertical silhouette should
counterbalance your face length. If you
have a long face, you need horizontal
emphasis. Flat styles, sides swept hair,
anything that reduces vertical height.
Adding volume on top will only make your
face look even longer. Look at Adam
Driver. He has an elongated face, which
is why he almost exclusively wears his
hair flat or sides swept. You never see
him with a quiff or high volume on top.
It would exaggerate his facial
proportions because it makes the face
immediately look stretched and
unbalanced. But if you have a short,
more compressed face, the opposite would
apply. You need vertical emphasis to add
height. Bruno Mars is famous for his
long afro, but it doesn't just look
cool, it also adds volume and height,
elongating his facial proportions. And
even when he's not wearing the afro,
like here, he usually goes for upward
styled hairstyles because short styles
like a buzzcut would draw focus to a
slightly compressed face. On the other
hand, if your face is balanced
vertically like Robert Patterson, you
have complete flexibility. High volume
styles, flat styles, slick back looks,
all of them generally work because there
is no vertical imbalance to correct. The
fourth and final feature will determine
if you can pull off a buzz cut, which is
your jaw projection. Short hair,
especially buzz cuts, remove all
distraction from the lower third.
There's nothing to soften and redirect
attention making your jaw the focal
point. Streamer Marlon Ludrin Garcia
became known for his buzzcut. His jaw is
angular, well projected and defined. So
removing hair draws more attention to
that particular feature. Another famous
example is Jeremy Meeks. His short hair
emphasized his facial structure, eyes,
and especially his jawline so
dramatically that his mug shot went
viral, launching his career as a
professional model. On the other hand,
if your joy is softer like Austin
Butler's, short hair also exposes that.
In those cases, messy textured styles
work better because they create visual
distraction. Take a look at this morph.
A buzz cut would shift all focus to his
lower third, which isn't his strongest
feature. Once you understand these four
features, you realize why someone like
Brad Pitt was able to pull off
practically any hairstyle throughout his
career, while another individual with
the exact same face shape could not. So,
forget what the face shape chart says.
And if you want us to analyze your face,
head over to goo.com.