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​You're doing it wrong: Shaping your beard

You've got a nice crop of stubble going, and now you need to clean up your neck. Which means it's time for that first big decision.

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So you've decided to grow a beard. You’ve got a nice crop of stubble going, and now you need to clean up your neck. Which means it’s time for that first big decision: Where does your shave end and your beard begin?

“If your chin or your jaw isn’t really there, a beard can bring some shape to the face,” says Jessica Candia, a hairstylist at Brooklyn’s Persons of Interest barbershop. “It’s very helpful, but it can get tricky.”

If you’re tempted to shave right under your jaw line, we have some simple advice: don’t. Leaving the underside of your chin bare is a recipe for embarrassment. Actually, make that embarrassment times two.

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“It’s an instant double chin,” says Candia. “You could be a string bean, and it will still give you that appearance.”

When you end your beard right at your jaw line, you’ve given yourself what we call the “accidental chinstrap.” This type of beard stayed behind in the ‘90s. And for good reason.

When you look down at your phone, it’s like your beard has a beard—made of neck flesh. When you turn your head, your beard turns with it. When you yawn, your chin slides out of your beard and into your neck.

Problem is, you need to draw the line somewhere. Unless you’re the kind of guy whose beard magically tapers off into his neck, you’re going to require a neckline.

“If you naturally taper under the neck already, a fade on the neck cleans it up without adding hard lines,” says Candia. “But with a lot of guys, hairier guys, the chest doesn’t separate from the neck hair without shaving.”

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And when you’re shaving, even the most well-intentioned neckline can raise your beard up too high. The good news is, once you know this rule of thumb, you’ll never do that again.

Take your index finger and point to your Adam’s apple. Now slide your finger up to the top of your Adam’s apple, where it meets your neck. Think of it like balancing your finger on top of that little nub of cartilage (or whatever it is).

For most guys, including facial hair chameleon Chris Daughtry, this is the natural boundary between under-chin and neck.

Now it’s time to trim along this boundary. When you tip your head back, the neckline should look fairly straight, running from one corner of your jaw to the other.

“Follow the line around without rounding too much,” says Candia. “It shouldn’t be a V—there should definitely be hair under both sides of the jaw.”

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Use either your normal razor or a small trimmer—the neckline requires neat work. But don’t worry. If you screw it up, it’s fixable. Give your whole beard a short trim, resume shaving where the line should be, and let the boundary area grow back in.

A beard generally grows about a half an inch a month, but thanks to the contrast with your bare neck, even a couple weeks’ growth makes an impact. Relax. Breathe.

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