A hat sits directly above the forehead, which makes it one of the fastest ways to change a face's apparent proportions without cutting or growing anything. On a inverted triangle face — forehead is the widest point; jaw is significantly narrower, tapering to a fine chin. — the right hat shape can meaningfully rebalance the silhouette.

Construction and Fit

Construction: Downward-sloping brim on all sides, soft unstructured crown. Softens the entire hairline with a continuous curved edge.

Why It Suits This Shape

Why it suits this shape: Minimize width at the forehead and temples while building width or structure at the jaw, using volume, texture, or facial hair to bring the lower face into closer proportion with the upper face. A bucket hat works well here because it's angular faces looking for an all-around softening effect, which is close to a direct description of a inverted triangle face's starting proportions.

Where to Be Careful

Where to be careful: Already-round or soft faces, where the curve adds no useful contrast.