Choosing eyewear for a square face comes down to one question: does the frame's shape work with or against the face's existing lines? A square face has a broad, angular forehead and a jaw with a defined, often 90-degree-adjacent corner at the hinge. Width stays consistent from temple to jaw rather than tapering, and the chin is flat or minimally curved rather than pointed. Cat-Eye Frames — upswept outer corners that angle up toward the temples. — interacts with that geometry in a specific, predictable way.
The Visual Effect
The visual effect: Lifts the outer eye line and adds width at the upper face. On a square face, where broad and straight across, roughly equal in width to the jaw and the defining feature — strong, straight, with a visible corner at the angle, 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: Soften the jaw's hard corner and add movement at the temples and chin. Rounded shapes — in a haircut's ends, in frame lenses, in a beard's edge — counter the squareness without erasing the jaw's natural strength, which most square-faced people are better served by softening than hiding. Frames that are faces that are narrower at the top and benefit from upper-face width are the ones worth trying first on a square face; frames that are faces already wide at the forehead or temples 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 square face that's the forehead or jaw area. Frames noticeably narrower than that measurement will look pinched; frames noticeably wider will overwhelm the face rather than balancing it.