Verdi Beard
A full, rounded beard kept deliberately groomed, crowned by a distinct, slightly curled mustache — the dressed-up full beard, previewed on your own face.


Real result — same face, not a stock model or a filter.
Not sure it suits your face? Check your face shape — free →
Who it suits
The Verdi — named for the Italian composer — is the Garibaldi's polished sibling: a full, rounded, medium-length beard with a neatly brushed bottom, paired with a mustache that's styled as its own element, often combed and curled slightly upward. The full coverage flatters narrow and tapering faces by adding lower-face weight, and the groomed finish makes it the most formal-reading of the big beards. It asks for strong mustache growth specifically — the styled mustache is the signature — and rewards men who actually enjoy a grooming ritual.
What to expect in real life
Reaching Verdi territory takes two to three months of growth, but unlike the Garibaldi the maintenance is active from there: the beard body wants regular brushing and a trim every couple of weeks to hold its rounded, tidy silhouette, and the mustache needs daily combing plus a touch of wax to keep its upward set distinct from the beard. Think of it as a five-to-ten-minute morning ritual. The payoff is a big beard that reads deliberate and elegant rather than wild.
How this is different from a filter
A filter pastes a generic beard layer over the lower half of your face — you can't see how the edges fall against your own jaw angle, how the density reads with your skin tone, or whether the shape suits your features. Stylery re-renders the facial hair itself — the rounded groomed body, the separately styled mustache, the way both sit against your jaw and lip — mapped onto your actual photo. Your face shape, skin tone and features stay untouched, so you're judging the style against your real structure, not a stock model.





