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 rectangle face — face length is noticeably greater than width (often 1.7x or more); forehead, cheek, and jaw widths are similar. — 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: Introduce visual width and interrupt the vertical line — horizontal volume at the sides, fringe or bangs that shorten the forehead, and frames or hairlines with a strong horizontal emphasis all work against excess length rather than adding to it. 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 rectangle face's starting proportions.

Where to Be Careful

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