Cut & Style · Sub-chapter 04
A fringe reframes the whole face without touching the length. It also grows out relentlessly and requires more maintenance than any other part of a haircut. Understanding both sides is the job of this guide.
134 how-to's · Updated 1 May 2026 · Avg. 4 min per piece · Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director
Editor's note
The fringe is the single fastest way to change the read of a face — and the fastest way to regret a haircut. Every fringe type has a different maintenance cadence, behaves differently on humid days, and suits a different face shape. The question isn't whether to get a fringe; it's which one, and whether you actually want to maintain it. Below: the complete guide, broken down by variation, face shape, and texture.
Fringe variations
- Blunt fringe — maximum weight, high-contrast, most demanding
- Wispy fringe — point-cut, airy, more forgiving on round faces
- Side-swept fringe — crosses the forehead, very versatile
- Curtain fringe — centre-parted, 70s reference, works on most faces
- Micro fringe — very short, high fashion, limited to oval faces
All fringe how-tos
- Which fringe suits your face shape
- Blunt fringe vs wispy fringe — the maintenance difference
- How to cut a fringe at home (and when not to)
- Fringe on wavy and curly hair — what works
- Growing out a fringe — the three difficult stages
- Side-swept fringe: styling it to stay