Jawline Analyzer
Understand your jawline shape and styling benefits.
Jawline silhouette types
These describe how the lower face transitions from ear to chin—strong angles vs softer curves.
A broad, defined corner near the jaw with minimal taper.
Narrowing toward the chin creates a pointed lower silhouette.
A smoother curve without a sharp jaw corner.
The chin leads the profile line with clear forward structure.
Profile reads softer under the lower lip—often lighting-dependent.
Neither extremely sharp nor extremely soft—a versatile baseline.
How our AI analyzes the jawline
We emphasize the angle under the cheek, the width at the gonial area, and how the chin completes the silhouette.
Profile-friendly cues
Even a slight head turn can help—but frontal cues still carry signal.
Width vs taper
Lower face width is compared to cheek placement for shape labels.
Chin integration
Chin projection refines the final category.
Contour recommendations
Shadow and highlight placement respects your silhouette goal.
Benefits
Jawline-aware contour reduces harsh lines and improves side-profile photos.
Blend along the real jaw curve instead of a generic line.
Length around the jaw can soften or emphasize angles intentionally.
A chin-forward micro-adjustment often improves definition.
Beard lines can be mapped with a clearer target shape.
User testimonials
Jawline analyzer feedback.
“Good summary and contour tips. The UI feels premium.”
“I understood my result in seconds.”
“Not just a label—actual guidance underneath.”
FAQs
Jawline analyzer FAQs.
Does beard affect results?+
Yes. A clean shave or trimmed outline can make the jaw silhouette easier to read.
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.