Proportion
Keep the frame width balanced with your features rather than pushing to extremes.
Oval face glasses guide
An oval face works with a wide range of frames. The goal is to preserve its natural balance while expressing your preferred style.

Keep the frame width balanced with your features rather than pushing to extremes.
Both soft curves and defined edges can work when the overall fit remains proportionate.
Use frame details to highlight your eyes without overpowering your natural balance.
Oval faces offer room to explore classic, refined, and more style-forward options.
Compare frame direction, fit notes, and how each style frames the eyes.

Soft Rectangle gives this face shape a clear eyewear direction with room to adjust fit and finish.

Creates a gentle lift at the outer edge while keeping the frame refined.

Light Aviator gives this face shape a clear eyewear direction with room to adjust fit and finish.
Fit notes
The same frame family can look different depending on width, lens depth, bridge fit, and visual weight. Pay attention to these dimensions when comparing options.
Keeps the outer edge in proportion with your cheekbones and temples.
Changes how much visual space the frame creates around the eyes.
Controls where the frame sits and whether it feels stable.
Adjusts how much the frame leads your overall expression.
These directions can still work, but the fit needs more attention.
They can make natural balance feel less intentional.
They may crowd the features instead of framing them.
They can dominate features that already sit in balance.
Continue from frame fit into hairstyles, face-shape signals, and deeper styling context.


Hairstyle guide
Flexible styles that keep natural balance visible.
Read guide
Start with frames that support proportion, contour, focus, and expression. Use the dimensions above to compare which direction adds the most clarity for your features.
Frame width should usually sit close to the widest practical point of the face. Slightly wider or narrower can both work depending on the overall fit and visual weight.
The fit principles stay consistent, but the images and frame directions change by audience to match common preferences and styling references.
No. Shape gives the style direction, while width, bridge fit, lens depth, and visual weight decide whether the frame actually looks right on the face.
Upload a photo to discover your closest face-shape match and explore personalized frame directions.