The struggle is real. You have a long face shape, and you’re scrolling through Instagram only to find that most of those trendy haircuts look awkward and elongated on you. Your stylist keeps suggesting the same go-to styles. You want something fresh, something flattering, something that actually works with your face shape instead of against it. The good news? There’s a whole world of gorgeous options specifically designed to complement longer face proportions.
Long faces have distinct proportions — more vertical length relative to width — which means certain cuts and styles work like magic to create balance and dimension. The right haircut doesn’t just look better; it changes how your face photograph, how you feel about yourself in the mirror, and how much styling effort you actually need each morning. The styles women keep requesting right now range from classic options with a modern twist to completely fresh cuts that are gaining serious momentum in salons everywhere.
What makes a haircut work for a long face comes down to a few core principles: adding width at the sides, breaking up vertical length with horizontal lines, keeping some fullness around the cheeks and jawline, and strategically using texture and layers. When you understand these principles, you can walk into any salon and get exactly what you need. Let’s dive into the twenty cuts that are solving this problem for women everywhere.
1. The Modern Wolf Cut
The wolf cut has become the unofficial mascot of multidimensional face-flattering styling. This style stacks shorter, choppy layers on top while keeping length throughout the bottom, creating that signature shaggy-meets-blunt silhouette. For long faces, the shorter layers at crown and throughout the mid-length add width and break up vertical lines beautifully.
Why It Transforms Long Face Proportions
The genius of the wolf cut is how it plays with depth and dimension. Those choppy, textured layers catch light differently across your whole head, which visually widens your face as the eye moves up and down the cut. The slightly messy, piece-y texture also softens what can sometimes feel like a long, narrow profile. You get movement and body without sacrificing overall length.
How to Request It Correctly
Show your stylist reference photos from multiple angles — not just straight-on pictures. Ask for textured, choppy layers that start around ear-level, with the shortest pieces at the crown creating lift and volume. The key phrase: “I want layers that move toward my face at the jaw and cheekbones, not away from them.” Most stylists understand the wolf cut now, but spelling out that you want face-framing pieces makes all the difference.
Styling Tips for Best Results
- Blow dry with a round brush, directing the layers inward and forward toward your face
- Use a texturizing spray or sea salt spray to emphasize those choppy layers — they look better with intentional texture than when they’re perfectly smooth
- The slightly undone look is actually the goal here, so don’t overthink morning styling
2. The Shoulder-Length Shag
Not your grandmother’s shag — this modern version features longer layers that start lower on the head, typically around shoulder-length, creating that effortless, lived-in aesthetic without looking costumey. For long faces, the horizontal movement at shoulder level breaks up length in exactly the right spot.
The Face-Shortening Magic
Shoulder-length layers create a natural visual break right where your shoulders begin, which tricks the eye into seeing less vertical face length. The shag layers that fall around your shoulders frame your face without cutting too close, and the fullness at that mid-length point adds welcome width to the sides of your face.
How to Ask Your Stylist for This Look
Bring inspo photos showing a shag with layers starting no higher than chin-length, with the longest pieces hitting shoulder-length or just below. Tell your stylist you want “softer layers, not choppy ones” and that you’re going for “texture without looking too short on top.” The difference between a modern shag and a choppy wolf cut matters when you’re trying to keep a certain overall length.
Getting the Texture Right
Shags look best with some natural wave or with daily styling using a curling iron. The movement is essential — a straight shag can look stringy and emphasize length rather than break it up. Consider asking your stylist about a light perm or asking for products that help you create waves easily at home.
3. The Blunt Bob with Face-Framing Pieces
A well-cut blunt bob ending at chin-length or just below can completely balance a long face, especially when you add carefully placed shorter pieces that frame the face. The key is the face-framing elements — they’re what make this work for longer proportions.
Why The Blunt Line Matters
A blunt bob creates a strong horizontal line that visually shortens the face by essentially placing a border around it. Your eye stops at the blunt line, making your face appear wider and less elongated. The face-framing pieces soften that bluntness while keeping the shortening effect.
How to Get It Right at Your Salon
Ask for a blunt line ending between chin and collarbone — anywhere shorter than chin might not give you the length-breaking effect you need. Request 2-3 shorter, softer pieces in front that fall just past your cheekbones (not shorter than that, or they’ll look babyish). Specify that you want a “blunt back with softer, longer face-framing pieces.”
Daily Styling for Maximum Impact
- Blow dry with a paddle brush to smooth the blunt line and keep it sharp
- The face-framing pieces look best when they have a slight wave or curl, so consider a small round brush or curling iron on those sections
- A bit of texturizing spray can add movement and prevent the look from feeling too severe
4. The Layered Lob with Curtain Fringe
The lob (long bob) is having a major moment, and for good reason — it’s incredibly versatile. But when you add a subtle curtain fringe and layering throughout, it becomes a total face-shape game-changer. The parted, curtain-style fringe skims your cheekbones and adds dimension right where long faces need it most.
What Makes This Cut Special for Longer Faces
The curtain fringe (also called a face-framing fringe or soft fringe) parts in the middle and falls on either side of your face, hitting around your cheekbones. This creates vertical lines that split your face, visually making it appear narrower (which is actually what you want — it balances out the vertical length). The layers throughout add texture and movement that prevents the overall look from feeling heavy or long.
How to Request This at Your Salon
Show pictures of a lob (usually hitting between chin and shoulder) with visible layers throughout and a curtain fringe parting in the middle. Use the phrase “soft fringe” or “curtain fringe” to distinguish this from a blunt bang. Tell your stylist you want “the fringe to hit my cheekbones and part naturally without needing to style it that way every time.”
Maintaining the Look
This cut works best with regular trims every 4-5 weeks because both the layering and the fringe need to maintain their shape and position. If you don’t want to style your hair daily, ask your stylist about product recommendations for creating texture and movement effortlessly.
5. The Long, Textured Shag with Lots of Layers
If you’re not ready to go shorter, a long textured shag loaded with layers throughout lets you keep serious length while still getting serious face-flattering benefits. This isn’t a subtle cut — it’s a statement style with dimension everywhere.
Building Width Where Long Faces Need It
Multiple layers create an overall wider silhouette because they add volume and movement throughout your entire head rather than in just one spot. That broken-up texture prevents your hair from falling in one solid line that emphasizes length. Each layer catches light independently, creating visual interest that distracts from vertical proportions.
Getting the Right Texture
Ask for layers that start closer to your scalp (creating lift and volume at the crown and throughout mid-length) but preserve your overall length. Specify that you want “choppy, textured layers throughout — not just on top.” This is different from a shag where layers are concentrated in one area. You’re going for dimension head-to-toe.
Styling This Cut Well
Textured shags require regular styling to look intentional rather than accidental. You’ll need:
- A blow dryer and likely a curling iron or waves to emphasize the layers
- Texturizing spray or sea salt spray to keep that piece-y, dimensional look
- Commitment to touch-ups every 6-8 weeks to maintain layer shape
6. The Blunt Fringe with Long Layers
A blunt fringe (or blunt bangs) sits right at your eyebrows and creates an immediate horizontal line across your forehead. Paired with long, subtle layers below, this combination gives you the face-shortening fringe without committing to a shorter overall style. It’s a bolder choice that really works.
Why a Blunt Fringe Works Geometrically
A fringe that sits at eyebrow-level creates a visual stopping point exactly halfway down your face. This immediately reduces the apparent length of your lower face. Long, layered hair beneath the fringe keeps you from looking too “done” or severe — the layers add movement and softness that balances the structured fringe.
Requesting This Cut Correctly
Bring reference photos showing the exact fringe length you want (eyebrow-level, not shorter). Ask for “blunt bangs with subtle layers underneath” rather than “shag” or “choppy layers” — you want the focus on the fringe, with supporting length and movement below it. Tell your stylist that you want “the layers to be soft and not compete with the fringe visually.”
Managing the Styling Commitment
A blunt fringe requires regular trims — usually every 3-4 weeks — to maintain the blunt line as it grows out. You’ll also need to blow dry the fringe straight, which is a non-negotiable part of making this cut look intentional. If you’re not willing to do that daily, this might not be your cut.
7. The Textured Pixie-Bob Hybrid
For those wanting something shorter and more dramatic, a pixie-bob hybrid combines the short, choppy texture of a pixie with enough length to style different ways. The asymmetry and texture add width and break up vertical lines in ways a traditional pixie sometimes can’t.
The Face-Flattering Mechanics
Short, choppy layers create volume at the sides of the head, which adds width to narrow face proportions. The variation in length keeps the eye bouncing around rather than following a single vertical line. The longer pieces in front (typically jaw-length or just below) frame the face without overwhelming it.
How to Discuss This with Your Stylist
This is a style that requires clear visual references because it’s somewhere between two categories. Describe what you want: “I want a pixie texture and shape on top and at the back, but I want longer pieces in front that come past my chin. I want it asymmetrical and textured.” Make sure your stylist has done pixie-bobs or undercut bobs before — not all stylists specialize in short, geometric cuts.
Styling Reality Check
Short cuts like this require regular trims (every 4 weeks) to maintain shape. You’ll need to blow dry it regularly to keep the texture intentional rather than looking flat. This isn’t a wash-and-go style unless you naturally have very textured hair.
8. The Face-Framing Long Layers with Minimal Choppy Texture
Sometimes the answer is simpler: long hair with soft, face-framing layers that start around the ears and travel down, creating movement without the commitment of a full shag. This works beautifully for long faces when the layers are placed strategically and kept from being too choppy.
Why Soft Layering Works
Soft layers (meaning they’re blended smoothly rather than choppy and piece-y) create subtle movement that breaks up a long vertical line without making the cut feel busy or high-maintenance. Layers placed around the face — specifically near cheekbones and jawline — add width and dimension exactly where you need it. The key is softness; you’re not going for texture, you’re going for subtle dimension.
Requesting Soft vs. Choppy Layers
This is a distinction your stylist needs to understand. Show pictures of hair that has dimension and movement but doesn’t look shaggy or textured. Use phrases like “soft layers,” “blended layers,” or “subtle layers.” You can say: “I want layers that create movement, not choppy texture.” Your stylist should be blow drying your cut blunt and then making layers by removing length gradually (soft) rather than point-cutting throughout (choppy).
Easy Styling
One reason this cut has staying power is that it requires minimal styling. Blow dry with a paddle brush, and the layers create movement naturally. Some days you might want to curl the ends or add texture with product, but it’s not required. This is a good option if you want a face-flattering cut without a daily styling routine.
9. The Sleek, Straight Bob with Hidden Layers
A modern approach that’s gaining serious traction: a sleek, smooth bob that appears blunt and straight from the front but has hidden layers underneath that create movement and prevent heaviness. It’s the best of both worlds — the clean lines and face-shortening benefit of a blunt bob, with the wearability of a layered cut.
How Hidden Layers Change the Game
When your stylist cuts layers into the underlayers of your hair (especially toward the back), those layers don’t show when your hair is smooth and straight. But they create volume, remove weight, and allow your hair to move more naturally. For long faces, this means you get that structured, face-flattering blunt line without the heaviness that sometimes makes long faces look even longer.
What to Tell Your Stylist
Ask for a “blunt bob with hidden layers” or “smooth bob with movement layers underneath.” Specify the length you want (chin-length or just below). Show pictures of the front view (where it should look sleek and blunt) and ask your stylist to understand that the layers are intentionally hidden. This requires a stylist with some technical skill — not all stylists think about cuts this way.
Styling This Look
- Blow dry straight with a paddle brush for the sleek, blunt appearance
- The hidden layers give you the option to add waves or texture when you want variety
- You can even pin the layers up or style them differently without needing a new cut
- It holds its shape better than you’d expect for a smooth bob because of the hidden texture
10. The Bixie: Textured Bob and Pixie Hybrid
Another hybrid gaining serious momentum — the bixie combines the softness and length of a bob with the texture and height of a pixie. It’s typically shorter in back (pixie-short texture) and longer in front (bob-length pieces), creating dramatic asymmetry and movement.
Why the Asymmetry Works for Long Faces
Asymmetrical cuts force the eye to move around the head rather than moving straight down. The textured short back creates lift and volume at the crown. The longer front pieces frame the face and add softness to balance the shorter back. The overall effect is sophisticated, modern, and genuinely face-flattering for longer proportions.
How to Ask For This Cut
This is another cut where photos matter tremendously. Find pictures showing the exact ratio you want (how much shorter in back vs. front). Tell your stylist: “I want a short, textured pixie-type cut in back and on top, but I want longer pieces in front that frame my face and go past my chin.” Mention that you want it intentionally asymmetrical and textured, not grown-out and messy.
Maintenance and Styling
- Back and top sections need trims every 3-4 weeks to maintain the pixie texture
- The longer front pieces grow out more slowly, so you can let those go longer between trims
- You’ll want to blow dry this cut to keep the texture intentional and the shorter pieces off your face
- It’s a bolder, more styled look — this isn’t for everyone, but if you like modern, fashion-forward cuts, it’s stunning
11. The Long Curtain-Cut with Movement Layers
A curtain cut (hair parted in the middle with longer pieces framing the face on both sides) has become iconic for a reason. When executed with movement-focused layers underneath, it’s an incredibly versatile, face-flattering option that works with almost any hair type.
The Face-Balancing Power of Curtains
The center part and sides-framing layers create vertical lines running down your face, which visually narrows it (which balances long proportions). The longer pieces also have the benefit of being moveable — you can wear them back, frame your face with them, or tuck them behind your ears depending on your mood. The layers underneath create shape and prevent the overall look from feeling flat or heavy.
Requesting This Cut Well
Ask for a “curtain cut with layers underneath” or “center-parted curtain layers.” Show pictures of the length you want the framing pieces to be (typically cheekbone-length or just below). Mention that you want “the ability to wear these pieces tucked back or framing my face, so I need them long enough for both options.” Specify whether you want “movement layers or soft texture” so your stylist understands the overall vibe you’re going for.
The Versatility Factor
One reason the curtain cut keeps resurfacing is that it works with so many styling options:
- Wear it fully straight for a sleek, modern look
- Add waves for texture and movement
- Blow dry with volume at the crown to add lift
- Tuck the face-framing pieces back for a completely different look
- Pin the layers up while leaving the face-framing pieces down
12. The Angled Lob with Side-Swept Bangs
An angled lob (longer in front, shorter in back) creates a diagonal line that’s incredibly flattering for long faces. Add subtle side-swept bangs, and you’ve got a sophisticated, professional cut that actually works geometrically to balance long proportions.
How Angles Create Face Balance
A diagonal line (from short in back to longer in front) is different from a vertical line in how it guides the eye. Instead of scanning straight down your face, the eye follows the diagonal, which feels less emphasizing of length. The side-swept bangs create an additional horizontal element near your forehead, further breaking up vertical space.
Getting This Angle Right
Ask for an “angled lob, longer in front, shorter in back” and specify how much angle you want (some people want just a subtle difference, others want a more dramatic choppy effect). Request “side-swept bangs” that are “subtle and not blunt” — they should blend into the longer front pieces, not be a separate element. This requires a stylist who understands cutting angles and how to blend different lengths smoothly.
Styling Approach
- Blow dry the side-swept bangs to one side (whichever side feels natural when parting your hair)
- The angle naturally encourages your hair to fall asymmetrically, which is the goal
- Add waves or texture if you want, but the cut works great straight too
- You might need a trim every 5-6 weeks to maintain the angle as everything grows out
13. The Sleeked-Back, Volume-at-Crown Look
This is more of a styling approach combined with a cut, but it’s worth mentioning because it’s incredibly flattering for long faces. The cut is typically longer and relatively simple (minimal layers), but the styling creates all the face-flattering magic.
Why This Actually Works
Slicking hair back or creating volume at the very crown while keeping sides smooth and close to the head makes your face appear wider and creates height that balances length. Your eye is drawn upward (to the crown volume) and outward (to the smooth sides), making the face appear less elongated.
The Cut That Enables This Style
Ask for “minimal layers with length” or a “blunt, long cut with very subtle layers.” You want a cut that looks sleek when blow-dried smooth but also has enough texture or shape to create crown volume. This is the opposite of a highly textured or choppy cut — you want smoothness as your baseline, with the ability to create drama through styling.
How to Actually Achieve This Look
- Blow dry with your head flipped upside down to create lift at the roots
- Use a round brush or blow dryer to direct hair back and away from your face while drying
- A volumizing mousse or texturizing spray at the roots helps maintain this throughout the day
- Keep sides smooth by blow drying them down and perhaps using a bit of product for hold
14. The Textured, Choppy Shoulder-Length Cut
Somewhere between a shag and a standard layered cut, this approach keeps you at shoulder-length (a sweet spot for many long faces) while loading up on choppy, textured layers that create dimension and prevent elongation.
Why Shoulder-Length Is the Magic Zone
Shoulder-length hair hits right at your shoulders, which creates a natural visual break and width. It’s not so short that you lose the option to style it different ways, but it’s not so long that you’re fighting against proportions. Add choppy layers throughout, and you’ve got a cut that’s youthful, modern, and genuinely face-flattering.
Asking for This Cut
Tell your stylist: “I want shoulder-length hair with choppy, textured layers throughout.” Bring pictures showing the level of choppiness you want — some people prefer subtly textured layers, while others want a more aggressive, piece-y look. Specify that the layers should start relatively high (creating volume at the crown) and continue throughout.
Styling and Maintenance
- This cut looks best with regular blow drying and texturizing product
- You can wear it straight, wavy, or fully textured depending on your mood
- Layers need trims every 6-8 weeks to maintain shape and prevent tangles
- The choppy texture shows dirt faster than smoother styles, so you might need to wash your hair more frequently
15. The Longer Choppy Mullet (Modern Shag)
The modern mullet has nothing to do with the 1980s — it’s a sophisticated, fashion-forward cut that’s been redefined for contemporary styling. Short, textured layers on top and at the back, with longer length in the front and sides, create movement and visual interest while breaking up vertical lines.
Why This Cut Is Surprisingly Flattering
The longer pieces in front frame your face and hit around your cheekbones or collarbone, adding width and dimension. The shorter, textured back creates lift and prevents your whole head from feeling weighed down. The overall effect is interesting and modern without looking costume-y.
How to Request the Modern Mullet
Show clear reference photos — this cut is still relatively new in mainstream salons, and you want to make sure you and your stylist are on the same page. Describe what you see: “Short, choppy texture on top and back, but I want longer pieces in front that frame my face.” Specify the exact front length you want (chin-length, collarbone-length, etc.). Let your stylist know you want it “intentionally asymmetrical and choppy, not accidental.”
The Styling Commitment
Like most highly textured cuts, this requires regular blow drying and usually texturizing product. You need trims every 4-6 weeks to maintain the short, textured back and top. This is a statement cut — it works beautifully for people who like their hair to be a visual focus, less so for people who want a low-maintenance style.
16. The Subtle, Piece-y Long Layers
For those who want layers but prefer a more understated approach, subtle piece-y long layers create dimension and movement without being a bold, textured statement. The layers are there, they’re functional, but they’re quiet.
The Understated Approach
Subtle piece-y layers are created with point-cutting or other techniques that remove length gradually rather than dramatically. From a distance, your hair might look relatively simple. Up close, you see the texture and movement that prevents it from feeling flat or heavy. This is the Goldilocks option — not choppy, not blunt, just right.
How This Works for Long Faces
The layers break up vertical lines without making the cut feel trendy or high-maintenance. The pieces catch light and add dimension that makes hair appear fuller and more textured. Because the layers are subtle, they don’t draw attention to the cut itself — they just enhance what you already have.
Requesting This Level of Layer
Tell your stylist: “I want subtle layers with a piece-y texture, but I don’t want choppy or aggressive layering.” Show pictures of hair that looks like it has texture and movement but also looks sleek and understated. Mention that you want “soft piece-y texture” or “subtle chop” to distinguish this from a full-on shag.
Easy Maintenance
- This cut works great with minimal styling — blow dry and go
- You can add waves with a curling iron if you want more drama, or wear it straight
- Trims every 8-10 weeks keep the texture looking intentional rather than grown-out
- Works with almost any hair type and texture
17. The Blunt Bob with Undercut
An undercut (short, shaved or closely trimmed hair underneath longer hair on top) combined with a blunt bob creates visual intrigue and prevents the heaviness that sometimes plagues longer faces with bobs. The hidden undercut adds shape and dimension that shows when your hair moves.
Why the Undercut Changes Things
An undercut removes weight and bulk from underneath while keeping your top line blunt and face-framing. This combination is lighter and more wearable than a full, blunt bob while maintaining the face-shortening benefits. The undercut also creates a visual “break” that makes the cut feel less long and solid.
How to Ask For This
If you’re ready for a bold move, tell your stylist: “I want a blunt bob” (specify the length) “with an undercut underneath.” Be specific about how short you want the undercut (some people like a close shave at 0-1mm, others prefer something longer like 3-5mm). Mention where you want the undercut (just at the nape, or more extensively throughout the back).
Styling and Maintenance
- The undercut shows when you put your hair up or move, creating visual interest
- Blow dry down over the undercut for a sleek look, or style it to show
- You’ll need touch-ups on the undercut every 3-4 weeks as hair grows out
- This is not a cut for those who want to keep things simple — it requires regular maintenance
18. The Soft, Blended Layers with Long Length
If you want to keep serious length but still benefit from a face-flattering cut, soft, blended layers throughout offer the best of both worlds. Unlike choppy shags, these layers are smooth and blended, creating shape without the textured aesthetic.
The Power of Blended Dimension
Blended layers create subtle changes in length that add shape and movement without making the cut obvious. Your hair falls naturally in different lines, which breaks up that solid long-hair silhouette. The effect is sophisticated and understated while still delivering real face-flattering benefits.
What to Communicate to Your Stylist
Ask for “soft, blended layers throughout” or “subtle blended layers with soft texture.” You want your stylist to remove length gradually using techniques like razoring or blending cuts, not point-cutting for choppiness. Bring pictures of smooth, textured hair (like Hailey Bieber or similar references) to show the vibe you’re after.
Styling These Layers
- They look great blown straight or wavy
- Minimal product needed — just your regular blow dryer and maybe some texturizing spray
- Layers need trims every 8-10 weeks to maintain the blended shape
- This is one of the most versatile cuts because it works with multiple styling approaches
19. The Faux Hawk or Mohawk Mullet
For those wanting something bolder, a faux hawk or mohawk-mullet hybrid creates serious visual interest and width at the crown. Longer on the sides and considerably shorter on top, this cut adds height and prevents the face from appearing elongated.
The Geometry of Height
When you have significant height at the crown (the top of your head), the proportions of your face shift visually. Your face appears shorter in relation to your overall head, which balances the vertical elongation. The longer sides add width and frame the face, while the top texture adds volume.
How to Get This Right
This is definitely a cut to discuss thoroughly before your stylist picks up scissors. Describe exactly what you want: how short on top (measured in inches or showing pictures), how much longer on the sides, how textured the top should be. Tell your stylist whether you want it to look like a statement cut or something more wearable day-to-day.
Real Talk About Maintenance
This cut requires commitment. You’re looking at trims every 3-4 weeks to maintain the short top and keep everything sharp. You need to blow dry it regularly — this isn’t a wash-and-go style. If you’re willing to invest in the styling, it’s incredibly cool. If you’re not, skip this one.
20. The Modern Shag with Face-Framing Emphasis
The final option rounds back to the shag family but with a specific focus: a modern shag where the face-framing pieces are given particular attention and length, creating a frame-forward approach. This version of the shag prioritizes the pieces closest to your face.
Why Face-Framing Emphasis Matters
When your stylist specifically focuses on creating flattering pieces that frame your face while building the rest of the shag around those key pieces, you get maximum face-flattering benefit. These pieces hit your cheekbones or just below, adding width and softness exactly where you need it. The rest of the shag texture supports the face-framing elements without competing.
How to Request This Variation
Show reference pictures of shags where the face-framing pieces are clearly visible and emphasized. Tell your stylist: “I want a modern shag, but I want you to focus on creating beautiful face-framing pieces around my cheekbones. The rest of the texture should support those, not compete with them.” This level of specificity helps your stylist understand the priority.
Styling for Maximum Effect
- Blow dry those face-framing pieces toward your face, not away from it
- Use a small round brush or curling iron on them specifically to create soft shape
- The rest of the shag can be textured and piece-y, but those face-framing pieces should be smoother and more intentional
- Works beautifully with product like texturizing spray or light mousse applied throughout
Final Thoughts
The best long-face haircut is the one you’ll actually commit to styling and maintaining. Every single option here works for your face shape — the question is which one matches your lifestyle, your styling tolerance, and your personal aesthetic. Some cuts require trims every three weeks; others can go eight weeks between appointments. Some need daily blow-drying; others look great wash-and-go. Some are bold statements; others are subtle enhancements.
The conversation with your stylist matters as much as the cut itself. Bring reference photos, describe what you like about those references specifically (is it the texture? the length? the overall vibe?), and be honest about how much styling you’re willing to do. A stylist who understands face shapes and can explain why a particular cut works for you will change how you think about your hair. Your face shape isn’t a limitation — it’s information that helps your stylist create something that genuinely makes you look and feel better. Any of these twenty cuts can be that game-changer; you just need to find the right match.




















