Facial geometry: beyond basic face shape
The analysis identifies your face shape — Oval, Square, Round, Heart, Diamond, Oblong, or Triangle — but goes further: forehead width and hairline shape, cheekbone position and prominence, jaw width and definition, chin projection, and profile balance. It evaluates all three facial thirds (forehead, midface, chin) to identify which is dominant and which creates proportion imbalance, plus eye shape and nose geometry.
Three distinct hairstyle looks
Each look has an editorial name (e.g., "The Architect"), a precise cut description (length in inches, taper starting point, texture technique), a "why it works" explanation in terms of facial geometry, a specific product type and application method, and a maintenance level rating. The goal is not generic advice but a brief you can hand to any barber or stylist.
Beard architecture and brow design
For men, each hairstyle look is paired with a specific beard recommendation: shape, line placement, cheek and neckline exact positions, length, and grooming routine. For women, paired brow architecture guides cover shape, arch placement, tail length, and fill technique relative to facial geometry. Both are explained in terms of how they counterbalance or enhance the identified facial structure.
Eyewear recommendations by facial geometry
Frame recommendations go beyond shape — they specify proportional scale relative to your face width in mm, bridge fit (high or low bridge, nose pad vs. solid), and which frame types to avoid and why. Separate recommendations are given for optical and sunglasses when the guidance differs. Two to three frame geometries with rationale, not a list of brands.
AI image generation prompts for each look
Each of the three looks comes with a standalone, 80–120 word AI image generation prompt compatible with Midjourney and DALL·E. The prompts describe the subject's features objectively, include the specific hairstyle and grooming from that look, and place the subject in a contextual styling scenario. You can use them to visualize the look before committing to any change.