Hairstyle

Collarbone Lob

A long bob that lands at the collarbone — versatile, easy and flattering on almost everyone — previewed on your own photo.

Before
Collarbone Lob
BeforeCollarbone Lob

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

Try Collarbone Lob 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 collarbone lob is the most universally flattering length because it sits long enough to feel grown-up but short enough to add shape and lift. It suits virtually every face shape — round and square faces are lengthened by the vertical fall, while the collarbone length keeps it from dragging proportions down. It works across hair types: sleek on straight hair, soft and beachy on wavy, and full on thick hair where the length keeps weight under control. It’s also the easiest length to style two ways — straight for polished, waved for relaxed.

What to expect in real life

The lob is low-commitment and grow-out friendly: a trim every 8–10 weeks keeps the ends healthy, and as it grows it simply becomes mid-length hair rather than losing its shape. Day to day it’s genuinely flexible — air-dry with a wave spray for an undone look, or a quick round-brush blow-dry for something sleeker. Because the length sits off the shoulders, it doesn’t kink or bend the way longer hair does against your collar, which is part of why it always looks tidy with minimal effort.

How this is different from a filter

A filter drops a flat hair shape over your photo or blurs the edges — it can’t show how a collarbone-length cut will sit on your shoulders or frame your specific face. Stylery re-renders the lob on your real photo — the length, the body through the ends, the way it falls around your jaw — without touching your face. It’s a true preview of the cut on your own proportions, which a generic overlay can’t give you.

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Questions about collarbone lob

Is a collarbone lob good for thick hair?
Yes. The collarbone length keeps thick hair’s weight manageable, and a stylist can remove some internal bulk so it falls cleanly rather than expanding. It’s one of the easiest lengths for thick hair to handle.
Will a lob suit a round face?
It’s very flattering on round faces. Sitting just below the jaw at the collarbone, it creates length and avoids adding width at the cheeks, especially if styled with a little wave or soft face-framing.
How is a lob different from a bob?
A lob (long bob) sits around the collarbone, while a classic bob sits at or above the jaw. The lob is longer, more versatile and lower-commitment, with more length to style in different ways.