Long hair is beautiful… but sometimes it can feel heavy, flat, and a little shapeless around the face.
That’s exactly where curtain bangs come in. They don’t steal your length. They don’t demand a dramatic haircut. They simply frame your face, add movement, and make long hair feel styled without trying too hard.
And yes, you can do this at home — carefully.

Before you start, know this: most professionals still say curtain bangs are best left to a stylist. Even Vogue advises caution. So think of this as a safe, beginner-friendly guide — not a risk-free shortcut.
The golden rule you’ll see again and again?
Start longer than you think. You can always go shorter.
What You’ll Need (Simple Kit)
Keep it minimal. You don’t need a salon drawer.
- Sharp hair scissors (not kitchen scissors)
- Fine comb
- Hair clips
- Mirror with good lighting
- Optional: thinning shears for softening
- Round brush + blow dryer for styling
Curtain bangs are not just cut — they’re cut and styled in one sitting.
Step 1: Section Properly (Where Most People Go Wrong)
Start with dry hair if it’s straight or wavy.
If you have curly or coily hair, cut dry only to avoid shrinkage surprises.
- Part your hair down the middle.
- Create a small triangle section at the front of your head.
- The point of the triangle should sit about 1–2 inches back from your hairline.
- Clip the rest of your hair away.
This triangle is all you’re cutting. Not your whole front section.
Step 2: Decide Your Safe Starting Length (Nose Rule)
This is the pro landmark repeated everywhere:
- Start cutting at the tip of your nose
- The sides should fall toward your cheekbones
This length works beautifully with below-the-shoulder hair because it keeps everything soft and proportional.
Hold the section straight down between your fingers and cut straight across at nose level.
Yes, it will look blunt. That’s normal.
Step 3: Create the Curtain Shape
Now the magic happens.
Split that section into two equal parts.
- Take the right section → angle fingers slightly toward the cheekbone → trim diagonally
- Repeat on the left side
You’re creating a soft slope, not a straight line.

At this point, they will look long. That’s perfect.
Step 4: Point Cutting for a Soft, Wispy Finish
Blunt bangs are the enemy of curtain bangs.
Use point cutting:
- Hold scissors vertically
- Snip lightly into the ends
- Remove heaviness, not length
If you have thick hair, this is where thinning shears help remove bulk without shortening.
This step is what turns “I cut my bangs” into “I got curtain bangs.”
Step 5: Style Immediately (This Changes Everything)
Curtain bangs look wrong until they’re styled.
Use a round brush and blow dryer:
- Blow dry the roots upward for lift
- Roll the brush away from your face
- Let the hair cool in that shape
- Use no-crease clips while cooling for extra hold
This is the trio you see everywhere: round brush + blow dryer + lift.

Suddenly, you’ll see the sweep, the cheekbone framing, the softness.
Choose Your Length by Face Shape
This is where personalization matters.
- Round face → keep bangs slightly longer, past cheekbones
- Long face → allow a bit more fullness near the nose level
- Heart face → soft and wispy, not heavy
- Oval face → almost any curtain length works
If you’re unsure, copy references like Dakota Johnson for long, blended bangs or Daisy Edgar-Jones for soft romantic shaping.
These are used in salons as visual geometry references.
Texture-Specific Cutting Tips
One technique does not fit all.
Straight Hair
Cut dry or slightly damp. Point cut well to avoid harsh lines.
Wavy Hair
Cut dry. Waves will hide small mistakes and add softness naturally.
Curly Hair
Only cut dry. Start longer than nose level because curls bounce up.
Coily Hair
Stretch the curl gently while cutting. Go very slow. Tiny snips only.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
This is where most DIY cuts go wrong:
- Cutting too wide of a section
- Cutting above the nose on the first try
- Skipping point cutting
- Judging the bangs before styling
- Not matching the cut to your texture
Remember: curtain bangs grow out beautifully — but only if you don’t overcut them.
The 3-Minute Morning Routine for Long Curtain Bangs
Low maintenance is the biggest reason people love them.
On busy mornings:
- Spritz water or use dry shampoo at the roots
- Round brush for 60 seconds
- Clip while cooling as you do skincare
- Remove clips → done

How They Grow Out on Long Hair (Month by Month)
This part is rarely explained but very helpful.
- Month 1: Perfect cheekbone frame
- Month 2: Becomes soft face-framing layers
- Month 3: Blends into long layers
- Month 4+: Looks like intentional layering, not old bangs
This is why they’re called low-maintenance fringe.
DIY vs Salon: The Honest Note
If you want precision, go to a stylist. Bring reference photos. Use words like:
- “face-framing fringe”
- “Start at the nose.”
- “blend to cheekbones.”
That consultation language is what pros expect.
DIY works best for refining, not dramatic first cuts.
Final Takeaway
Curtain bangs are not about cutting a lot of hair. They’re about cutting just enough to frame your face while keeping your long length intact. Start long. Soften the edges. Style immediately. Adjust slowly.
That’s the secret.
Save this guide for the moment you’re standing in front of the mirror with scissors in hand.



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