How do I know if I have good bone structure?
Good bone structure shows as visible definition along the jawline, cheekbones, and brow ridge when the face is at rest. The standard markers are a defined jawline (visible at 3/4 angle), high cheekbones, and a balanced ratio between face length and width. The Beauty Report scores bone structure as one of six sub-areas.
Bone structure refers to the underlying skull shape that shows through the soft-tissue layer of the face. Strong bone structure photographs well from multiple angles because the visible definition is consistent (a feature called 'photogenic from any angle' in casting language). The classical markers are a defined jaw, high cheekbones, a strong brow ridge in men, and balanced facial proportions.
Most faces have at least one strong bone-structure feature and at least one softer one. A face can have brilliant cheekbones with a soft jaw, or a strong jaw with low cheekbones. The Beauty Report breaks bone structure into the visible features individually rather than scoring it as a single overall mark.
Bone structure is largely fixed in adulthood (it does not change without weight changes or surgery), but the visible read of bone structure shifts with weight, hydration, posture, and styling. A defined jaw can read more or less defined depending on the facial fat layer. The Beauty Report covers what the bone structure looks like in your current photo, along with grooming and styling notes for how to emphasise its strengths.
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