Which Frames Suit Your Face Shape? An Honest Guide
Face-shape rules are a useful starting point — not a law. Here's the honest version of the guide, plus the shortcut: every frame on our site has virtual try-on, so you can see it on your own face in seconds rather than guessing from a diagram.
The one rule that actually matters
Contrast flatters. Frames that differ from your face's natural lines tend to look best: angular frames sharpen soft features, rounded frames soften angular ones. Nearly everything below follows from that.
Round faces
Full cheeks, soft jaw, width and length similar. Rectangular and squared frames add definition and make the face appear longer and slimmer. Classic wayfarer-style shapes work brilliantly. If a frame makes your face look wider, it's usually because it's too round or too small.
Square faces
Strong jaw, broad forehead, angular lines. Round and oval lenses soften the angles — think classic round metals or soft rectangular shapes with curved corners. Aviators work well too. Very boxy frames can double down on the angles; great if you want a bold, structured look, harsh if you don't.
Oval faces
Gently balanced proportions, slightly wider cheekbones. The lucky ones: almost every shape works. Use frames to express style rather than to correct anything — just keep the frame width roughly in line with the widest part of your face.
Heart-shaped faces
Wider forehead and cheekbones, narrower chin. Frames with a wider or detailed lower edge — rounded shapes, gentle cat-eyes, thin rims — balance the proportions. Very top-heavy frames (thick browlines) can emphasise the width up top.
Long / rectangular faces
Face noticeably longer than wide. Deeper lenses (taller top-to-bottom) and strong horizontal lines visually shorten the face. Oversized frames earn their keep here; narrow, letterbox-shaped lenses can exaggerate length.
Fit beats shape
Whatever the shape, three fit checks matter more: the frame should sit level and not slide down your nose; your eyes should sit roughly central in each lens; and the frame front should be about as wide as your face — we list the frame width in millimetres on every product page, so you can compare against a pair you already own.
Skip the theory
Rules are averages; your face isn't. Open any frame on our site, tap Virtual Try-On, and see it on you — it's the same technology our specialist team uses with customers in practice, and it settles “does this suit me?” faster than any guide.