Cut & Style · Sub-chapter 12
The shag is the most-referenced cut on Pinterest and the most frequently miscut in salons. Layers, curtain fringe, texture — everything playing at once. When it works, it's transformative. When it misses, it's just a badly layered lob.
161 how-to's · Updated 1 May 2026 · Avg. 4 min per piece · Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director
Editor's note
The shag is a specific cutting approach: heavy layers throughout the body, strong face-framing, textured — never polished — ends. The word 'shag' gets used loosely in salons to mean anything with layers and a fringe, which is how you end up with a result that looks like a lob with a haircut accident. The variables that make a shag a shag are precision layering from the top down, strong weight removal at the ends, and styling that leans into texture.
Shag variations
- Short shag — lob-length or shorter, curtain fringe almost obligatory
- Mid shag — the most common version, sits at shoulder or just below
- Long shag — below-shoulder, heavy layering, more rock
- Wolf cut — shag variant with heavier crown layers
- 70s shag — retro silhouette, blown out rather than textured
- Textured shag — air-dried with salt spray, the modern version
All shag how-tos
- Why your shag didn't turn out like the reference photo
- Shag for wavy hair — how to get texture without the frizz
- Shag with curtain bangs — the strongest combination
- Communicating a shag to your stylist
- Shag for straight hair — the styling technique it needs
- The wolf cut vs the shag — are they the same thing?