Beard

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.

Before
Verdi Beard
BeforeVerdi Beard

Real result — same face, not a stock model or a filter.

Try Verdi Beard on your photo →1 photo · ~15s · deleted after your session.

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.

Explore more beard

Questions about verdi beard

What makes a Verdi different from a regular full beard?
The mustache. In a Verdi it's groomed as a separate, prominent element — combed, often lightly waxed, ends turned slightly up — sitting over a rounded, tidily kept beard. A standard full beard lets the mustache blend in.
How long does the Verdi take to grow?
Two to three months for the beard body, and the mustache typically needs the same window to gain enough length to style. You can begin training the mustache with a comb from week four onward.
Do I need mustache wax every day?
A small amount, most days, if you want the signature upward set. Skipping it doesn't ruin the beard — it just relaxes the look toward a generic full beard until the next styling.