Choosing eyewear for a oval face comes down to one question: does the frame's shape work with or against the face's existing lines? An oval face has gently rounded corners with no single dominant angle. The forehead is the widest point, curving smoothly down through soft cheekbones to a jaw that narrows gradually into a rounded chin. There are no hard breaks in the jawline and no flat planes at the temples. Aviator Frames — teardrop-shaped lenses, thin metal frame, double bridge, wider at the bottom. — interacts with that geometry in a specific, predictable way.

The Visual Effect

The visual effect: Adds width and softness at the lower face and cheekbone area. On a oval face, where rounded, moderate width, slightly wider than the jaw and narrower than the cheekbones, curves smoothly with no sharp corners, this effect either corrects an imbalance or reinforces the face's existing character, depending on which measurement the frame emphasizes.

Why This Pairing Works

Why this pairing makes sense: Oval faces have the most structural balance of any shape, so the styling goal is preservation, not correction — most cuts, frames, and silhouettes already sit well on this shape. The main risk is choosing something so voluminous or so severe that it manufactures an imbalance that wasn't there to begin with. Frames that are faces that narrow toward the jaw and benefit from lower-face width are the ones worth trying first on a oval face; frames that are faces already wide or heavy at the jawline are worth trying on, but expect a less flattering result without careful sizing.

Sizing It Correctly

Sizing it correctly: The frame width should roughly match your face's widest measurement — for a oval face that's the cheekbones area. Frames noticeably narrower than that measurement will look pinched; frames noticeably wider will overwhelm the face rather than balancing it.