A square face is defined by a specific set of proportions: Forehead, cheekbone, and jaw widths are nearly equal; face length is close to face width. 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. That geometry is exactly why the long bob (lob) 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 square face: 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. The long bob (lob)'s placement of volume — below the jaw, at collarbone height — directly serves that goal. Length that extends past the jaw and chin, adding vertical space below the face, and jaw emphasis, since the cut line sits well below it rather than at it. On a square face specifically, whose forehead reads as "broad and straight across, roughly equal in width to the jaw" and whose jaw reads as "the defining feature — strong, straight, with a visible corner at the angle," 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 long bob (lob) is actually cut: A bob cut at or just below collarbone length rather than jaw length, with light layering at the ends, longer than a classic bob but shorter than shoulder-length long hair. Volume in this style sits at the below the jaw, at collarbone height. Trim every 6-8 weeks
Confirm You Have a Square Face
Confirming you actually have a square face first: Run a finger along your jaw from ear to chin. On a square face you can feel a distinct corner partway along, rather than a continuous curve. Forehead, cheekbone, and jaw width measurements will all land close together, usually within about 5% of each other.
What to Avoid Instead
What to avoid instead: For a square face, steer clear of blunt, geometric bobs cut in a straight line at jaw height (this doubles the squareness), angular rectangular frames, and beard lines trimmed in a hard straight edge that echoes the jaw instead of rounding it off. A long bob (lob) sidesteps that risk entirely because a bob cut at or just below collarbone length rather than jaw length, with light layering at the ends, longer than a classic bob but shorter than shoulder-length long hair.
Getting It Right
Getting it right at the barber or salon: Bring a clear photo reference, and specifically ask for volume concentrated at the below the jaw, at collarbone height — that's the detail that makes this cut work for a square face rather than just looking good on a model with different proportions. Trim every 6-8 weeks Between appointments, use a light styling product rather than a heavy one; on a square face, over-styling volume in the wrong zone can undo the proportional balance this cut is built to create.