A oval face is defined by a specific set of proportions: Face length is roughly 1.5x face width; forehead is slightly wider than the jaw. 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. That geometry is exactly why the curtain bangs performs as well as it does on this shape — the cut isn't a generic flattering choice, it's a structural match.

Why This Cut Works for Your Face Shape

Why it suits a oval face: 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. The curtain bangs's placement of volume — framing both sides of the face from temple to cheekbone — directly serves that goal. Softened temple width and diagonal lines that draw inward toward the center, and forehead width, partially covered by the longest center pieces. On a oval face specifically, whose forehead reads as "rounded, moderate width, slightly wider than the jaw" and whose jaw reads as "narrower than the cheekbones, curves smoothly with no sharp corners," this combination brings the upper and lower face into proportion rather than exaggerating whichever measurement is already largest.

The Mechanics of the Cut

How the curtain bangs is actually cut: Face-framing pieces cut longer at the center part and shorter toward the temples, parted down the middle and swept back on both sides rather than falling forward as a full fringe. Volume in this style sits at the framing both sides of the face from temple to cheekbone. Trim every 4-6 weeks to maintain the graduated shape

Confirm You Have a Oval Face

Confirming you actually have a oval face first: Stand in front of a mirror, pull your hair back, and trace your reflection on the glass with a dry-erase marker, or measure with a soft tape: forehead width, cheekbone width, jaw width, and face length (hairline to chin tip). If your length measurement is about 1.5 times your width and none of your three width measurements differs from the others by more than roughly 10%, you're looking at an oval.

What to Avoid Instead

What to avoid instead: For a oval face, steer clear of extremely heavy, blunt bangs that flatten the forehead entirely, and frames or hairlines that add width at the jaw without adding any at the forehead, which can make the natural taper look accidental rather than intentional. A curtain bangs sidesteps that risk entirely because face-framing pieces cut longer at the center part and shorter toward the temples, parted down the middle and swept back on both sides rather than falling forward as a full fringe.

Getting It Right

Getting it right at the barber or salon: Bring a clear photo reference, and specifically ask for volume concentrated at the framing both sides of the face from temple to cheekbone — that's the detail that makes this cut work for a oval face rather than just looking good on a model with different proportions. Trim every 4-6 weeks to maintain the graduated shape Between appointments, use a light styling product rather than a heavy one; on a oval face, over-styling volume in the wrong zone can undo the proportional balance this cut is built to create.