Eyebrow Shape Detector
Identify eyebrow shape and learn quick grooming rules.
Brow shape families
Brows frame the eyes. These categories describe arch placement, thickness tendency, and overall flow.
A gradual curve without a sharp peak—often easy for natural makeup.
A defined peak adds vertical lift and structure in photos.
Minimal arch; shaping often focuses on clean lines and tails.
A subtle dip near the head and lift through the arch can read elegant.
Curves appear smooth from head to tail—good for softening angular features.
The tail narrows cleanly; length and endpoint matter for balance.
How our AI analyzes brow shape
We read brow thickness, arch position, head-to-tail transition, and overall angle relative to your eyes.
Brow isolation
The brow region is prioritized so haircuts and bangs interfere less.
Arch detection
Peak height is compared to your eye placement for categorization.
Thickness mapping
Sparse vs dense brows receive different grooming suggestions.
Guidance output
You get shaping notes that respect natural growth patterns.
Benefits
Better brows make eye makeup and glasses choices easier.
Know where to trim vs where to grow in.
Brows help harmonize asymmetry around the eyes.
Bring a clear goal arch style to your brow professional.
Small brow tweaks can make expressions look more intentional.
User testimonials
Eyebrow detector feedback.
“The shape name matched what my brow artist said. Great tips.”
“I finally stopped over-trimming my tails.”
“The whole site feels cohesive and modern.”
FAQs
Eyebrow shape FAQs.
Should I remove brow makeup first?+
Yes, when possible—clean brows reduce guesswork for shape lines.
Does live camera work on my device?+
Most modern browsers support it. Allow camera permissions when prompted. If blocked, enable access in your browser settings and reload.
Is my photo uploaded to a server?+
No. Images stay in your browser for preview and analysis-style output. Nothing is sent to a server in this version.
How accurate are the results?+
Output is an estimate from your photo. Lighting, angle, and expression all affect what you see. Use results as styling inspiration, not a clinical verdict.