Lob + Square Face: Drop It Past the Jaw
A square face has a strong jaw — a lob flatters when it falls below that jawline and keeps soft, face-framing layers.
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Face Shape Guide
Strong angular jaw, equal width throughout
Add Volume Here: Crown
Textured height softens angular lines and draws the eye upward.
Keep It Short Here: Jaw & sides
Extra width at the jaw emphasizes squareness — taper here.
These are starting points — AI try-on shows you the real result on your actual face.
Why It Works
A square face is defined by a strong, angular jaw, and the danger with any bob is cutting it to jaw length — a blunt bob that stops right at the jaw draws a hard horizontal line that echoes and emphasizes the square corners. A lob solves this by dropping the length past the jaw, usually to the collarbone, so the cut flows beyond the widest, hardest point of the face instead of landing on it. Soft, face-framing layers and a bit of bend in the ends introduce the curves that soften a square shape. A side part with a sweep across the forehead breaks the straight hairline and adds to the softening, where a blunt center-parted bob would reinforce the geometry.
How to Style
- 01
Ask for a collarbone lob with soft, face-framing layers from the jaw down.
- 02
Keep the edge slightly textured rather than hard blunt.
- 03
Part deeply to the side and bend the ends in or out with a round brush or iron.
- 04
Use a texturizing spray to avoid a flat blunt finish; trim every eight to ten weeks.
Cut it to collarbone length past the jaw, never at it — a jaw-length blunt bob hardens a square face.
On a square face the line between a softening lob and a hardening bob is a couple of inches of length. AI try-on lets you preview a collarbone lob against a jaw-length bob on your own face before the salon commits.
"I tried 20 hairstyles before my salon appointment and found the perfect one."
— Jessica T.
Frequently Asked Questions
01. Does a lob suit a square face?
Yes, when it falls past the jaw to around the collarbone with soft layers. A bob cut to jaw length draws a hard line that emphasizes the square jaw.
02. Should a square face avoid a blunt bob?
A blunt bob at jaw length tends to harden the square corners. A longer lob with textured, face-framing layers softens them instead.
03. What part works best for a square face lob?
A deep side part. It breaks the straight hairline and softens the forehead corners better than a center part on a square face.
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