Hairstyle

Comma Fringe

A soft, curved fringe that curls in toward the face like a comma — the youthful, on-trend Korean-inspired look. See it on your own face.

Before
Comma Fringe
BeforeComma Fringe

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

Try Comma Fringe 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 comma fringe is defined by soft, curved pieces at the front that curl inward like a comma, framing the forehead and softening the face. It flatters oval and longer face shapes especially, where the rounded fringe shortens the forehead and adds softness, and it gives a noticeably youthful, current feel. It works best on straight to slightly wavy hair with a bit of body, since the comma shape is curved in with heat. It’s a softer, less severe alternative to a structured crop or fade — a good fit if you want a styled-but-gentle look rather than a sharp one.

What to expect in real life

The comma fringe is a styled look: the signature curve is created with a round brush or a curling iron and set with a light, flexible product — too much and it goes flat or stiff. The fringe needs trimming every 4–6 weeks to keep the length sitting right, and the sides are usually kept short or lightly faded for contrast. It takes a few minutes each morning to shape the comma, so it suits people who don’t mind a short styling routine in exchange for an on-trend, soft finish. Natural texture makes it easier; poker-straight hair needs more heat to hold the curve.

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 the curved fringe will sit against your brow or how much it shortens your forehead. Stylery re-renders the comma fringe on your own photo — the inward curl, the length at the front, the contrast with the sides — while leaving your face untouched. You’re judging the shape on your real forehead and features, not on a model with a similar style.

Explore more hairstyle

Questions about comma fringe

Does a comma fringe work on coarse or thick hair?
Yes — thick hair holds the comma curve well once it’s styled, though coarse hair needs a bit more product and heat to keep the shape soft rather than bulky. A stylist thins it slightly so the fringe curves cleanly.
Can I get a comma fringe with a high hairline?
It can help, because the forward, curved fringe covers the front of the hairline rather than exposing it. The length and curve are adjusted so the comma sits naturally over a higher forehead.
How much styling does a comma fringe need?
A few minutes daily — the curve is set with a round brush or curling iron and a light product. It’s more styling than a simple crop, but the payoff is the soft, on-trend shape that defines the look.