Face Shape Filter — Face Shape Filter

Face Shape Filter for Selfies and Portraits

ImageFaceImage Editing

Preview a different face shape in your own selfie or portrait with an AI face shape filter, face shape analyzer, and face shape editor for realistic contour changes.

Contour tests, kept natural.

A measured set of face-outline previews, from V line and oval balance to softer square, heart-shape, and chin definition. Each frame is about proportion and planning, not replacing the person or polishing away texture, and it stays closer to a face shape editor than a full beauty filter.

Real portrait used for the V-line face shape filter showcase slot
Subtle V Line · Selfie
Real portrait used for the oval-balance face shape filter showcase slot
Oval Balance · Portrait
Real portrait reused for the soften-square showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Soften Square · Jawline
Real portrait reused for the heart-shape showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Heart Shape · Taper
Real portrait reused for the round-to-oval showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Round to Oval · Preview
Real portrait reused for the longer-face showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Longer Face · Editorial
Real portrait reused for the defined-chin showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Chin Definition · Headshot
Real portrait reused for the jaw-softener showcase slot in the shipped first pass
Jaw Softener · Mirror

What Is a Face Shape Filter?

Face Shape Filter is an AI photo tool for previewing gentle changes to facial outline on your own selfie or portrait. It can act like a face shape analyzer, face shape editor, or face shape try on by rebalancing cheek fullness, jaw angle, cheekbone width, chin taper, and overall face proportion for V line, oval, heart shape, softer square, round to oval, and chin definition directions while keeping the person recognizable.

It is not a diagnosis tool, beauty standard score, or promise of real world appearance. It differs from jawline-only sharpeners by looking at the whole face contour, and it differs from broad beauty filters or makeup filters by preserving texture, expression, age, hairstyle, and lighting as much as possible. The goal is a respectful preview that helps you compare jawline, cheekbone, and chin shape without flattening the person into a generic glam effect.

Three presets, three moods.

01

V Line

Best for a tapered lower-face look with a cleaner chin.

02

Oval Balance

Best for balancing cheek fullness into a softer oval shape.

03

Soften Square

Best for reducing hard square angles without heavy slimming.

Use a front-facing portrait with the jawline and cheeks visible so V-line, oval, square-softening, or chin-definition previews stay local.

Compare one face-shape direction at a time; mixing jaw, cheek, chin, and contour changes can make the result harder to trust.

Keep professional or dating-profile edits subtle enough that friends and coworkers would still recognize the same facial structure.

Treat the preview as a styling and contour reference, not a medical, surgical, or permanent appearance prediction.

When to reach for Face Shape Filter.

Hairstyle Planning

Preview a more oval or tapered face outline before deciding whether a haircut, bangs, or framing layers will suit the look you want.

Profile Photo Cleanup

Make a selfie or headshot feel a little more balanced before using it for a profile picture, dating photo, or professional avatar.

Beauty Concept Testing

Try a heart-shape taper, softer square edit, or V-line direction before committing to a heavier beauty edit, makeup filter, or reshoot.

Creator Thumbnail Framing

Test whether a slightly longer or more tapered face outline reads better in a tight talking-head crop for social content.

How to use Face Shape Filter in three steps.

Most previews take about 1 minute. Use one clear front-facing portrait where cheeks, jawline, cheekbones, and chin are visible; no contouring or manual warping is needed.

  1. Upload Your Portrait

    Start with a selfie or portrait where the face outline is easy to see, especially the cheeks, cheekbones, jawline, chin, and hairline around the lower face.

    Tip: Avoid hands, heavy hair, and steep angles over the lower face because they make jaw and chin changes look less predictable.

  2. Choose a Face Shape

    Choose the contour goal you want to test: V Line for a stronger lower-face taper, Oval Balance for a subtle all-around adjustment, Soften Square for less angular cheeks and jaw, or Chin Definition when the chin is the main focus.

    Tip: Choose Oval Balance for the most subtle before-and-after, or V Line when you want the lower-face taper to be easier to notice.

  3. Generate and Compare the Contour

    Generate the result, then compare the cheeks, cheekbones, jaw edge, chin point, mouth position, and overall face proportions against the source before downloading.

    Tip: Rerun with a gentler preset if the eyes, mouth, or facial proportions shift along with the outline, especially when you want a face shape try on instead of a stronger makeover.

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Upload a selfie, choose a contour direction, and generate a Face Shape Filter result that reshapes the outline without replacing your identity.