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Damian Domzalski · · 6 min read

Best Angles for Selfies: The Complete Guide by Face Type

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Best Angles for Selfies: The Complete Guide by Face Type cover image

Why Angles Matter So Much

Phone cameras use wide-angle lenses that distort facial proportions at close range. Features closer to the lens appear larger โ€” which is why selfies often make noses look bigger and faces wider. The right angle compensates for this distortion and highlights your best features.

Research shows that a 15-30 degree angle above eye level is universally flattering because it defines the jawline, makes eyes appear larger, and creates a natural shadow that adds dimension.

Angles by Face Shape

Round faces: Hold camera slightly above and to the side. Tilt chin down slightly. This elongates the face and adds definition. Square faces: Angle slightly to one side with a gentle head tilt to soften strong angles. Oval faces: Lucky โ€” most angles work. Slightly above eye level for the most flattering results.

Heart-shaped faces: Straight on or slightly below to balance the wider forehead. Oblong faces: Keep camera at eye level or slightly below โ€” above-angle will elongate further. Diamond faces: Three-quarter angle to highlight cheekbones.

The Head Tilt Secret

A slight head tilt (about 10-15 degrees) makes photos look more natural and approachable. Research shows tilted heads are perceived as more friendly and attractive than perfectly straight poses. The tilt should be subtle โ€” think 'curious' not 'confused.'

Experiment with tilting toward the camera vs. away from it. Most people have a preferred side โ€” usually the left side of the face, which research suggests is more emotionally expressive.

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Distance and Framing

Keep your phone 2-3 feet from your face for natural proportions. Use the 0.5x wide-angle lens for full-body shots, but stick to 1x for close-up selfies. Frame your face in the upper third of the image, leaving some space above your head.

Pro tip: Use your phone's timer and prop it up for better distance and angles than arm's-length selfies allow. This eliminates the arm-strain angle and gives you more control over composition.

DD

Damian Domzalski

Founder of FirstVibe. Building AI tools for first impression and selfie analysis.

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