Facial hair changes a face's apparent proportions more than almost any other grooming choice, because it sits directly on the jawline — the exact measurement that defines whether a face reads as round in the first place. A round face has soft, full cheeks and a short jawline with a rounded, sometimes recessed chin. Because length and width are close to equal, the overall silhouette reads as a circle rather than an oval — the widest point sits at the cheekbones instead of at the forehead.
How It's Grown and Shaped
How it's grown and shaped: Goatee shape extended along the jawline in a thin strip, cheeks kept clean. Adds a defined jaw outline without the bulk of a full beard.
Why It Works
Why it works on a round jaw: This face shape's jaw reads as "short and rounded, without defined angles." A beard that is soft or undefined jaws needing an outline more than added mass directly addresses that starting point. The objective is to introduce visual length and angularity — height at the crown, vertical lines near the face, and any structure with a defined corner (a squared frame, an angular jaw-grazing cut) reads as elongating against the face's natural softness.
Where to Be Careful
Where to be careful: Already strongly defined jaws, where the thin line adds unneeded emphasis — if your jaw already leans that direction, ask your barber to reduce density slightly rather than following the standard shape exactly as described above.