Glasses today are more than vision tools—they are personal style statements. When choosing frames, it’s important to balance the comfort factor with the “pretty” factor. Here is how aesthetics play a role in selecting the perfect pair of eyewear.
Understanding Facial Proportions
Facial height can be divided into three equal sections:
-
Forehead to eyebrows
-
Eyebrows to bottom of nose
-
Bottom of nose to chin
If the eyebrows sit at roughly one-third of the facial height, the face is considered balanced.
Using eyebrow position, we can categorize faces into:
-
Long
Short
Balanced
General styling principles:
-
Long face: darker frames help visually “lower” the eyebrow line.
-
Short face: lighter or rimless frames help visually “lift” the eyebrow line.
-
A higher frame bridge makes the nose appear longer; a lower bridge shortens it visually.
-
Lower, wider temples visually shorten a long face; higher, narrower temples visually lengthen a short face.
Seven Common Face Shapes & Frame Tips
- Round Face
Choose frames with a wider width (A-size) and shorter height (B-size) to elongate the face. Avoid overly round or straight-lined frames.
- Oval Face
This face shape suits most styles. Wider A-sizes and medium B-sizes work well, but avoid sharply angled or straight-edged frames.
- Square Face
Look for round or oval frames, especially those with softer lower edges, to minimize angles. Semi-rimless styles can also help elongate the face visually.
- Rectangle Face
Choose rounded-edge square frames or deeper B-sizes. Darker tones can help shorten facial length.
- Diamond Face
Wider or more prominent upper-half frames balance the cheekbone area.
- Triangle Face
Smaller square or rounded frames work well. A wider lower edge gives good symmetry.
- Pyramid Face
The opposite of triangle-shaped faces: choose frames with wider upper edges and narrower lower edges, such as cat-eye styles.
To be continued with Part II — The “Comfort” Factor