Facial Harmony Analysis

Check Your Facial Harmony

Golden ratio (φ=1.618) + classic facial proportions

Get a detailed 12-metric report with grouped scores

Upload a clear, front-facing photo

Soft lighting, face centered, minimal filters. This helps landmarks stay stable and makes facial harmony measurements more accurate.

Results are for entertainment only, not medical or professional advice. Do not use as a basis for important decisions.

Facial Harmony Analysis

Facial harmony, measured in a way you can understand

A facial harmony test is more useful when it’s not just “everything must equal 1.618.” We compare golden ratio (φ) signals with classic canons and real-world feature proportions for a clearer picture.

This facial harmony report separates metrics into four groups: golden ratio (φ) key ratios, classic facial canons (like facial thirds and the “five eyes” rule), feature proportions, and alignment/symmetry. You’ll see your value, the target, the deviation, and a score—so you can tell whether a result comes from structure, pose, or photo quality.

Why this facial harmony analysis is more reliable

Many tools try to force dozens of measurements into φ=1.618, which makes scores unstable and hard to interpret. Our facial harmony approach uses φ only where it tends to be meaningful and stable, then uses classic canons and common proportion targets elsewhere. The result is a facial harmony report that’s easier to read, easier to retest, and more aligned with how faces are actually evaluated.

A reflective self-assessment concept image

1. What does “facial harmony” mean here?

In everyday terms, facial harmony means your features feel balanced together—vertically, horizontally, and in how individual parts relate to the whole. On this page, facial harmony is measured using ratios and alignment checks, not subjective “beauty scores.”

One piece of the puzzle is the golden ratio (φ≈1.618). In a facial harmony context, some stable relationships (like overall length-to-width tendencies) are often compared to φ, because it can correlate with a sense of balance in composition.

But facial harmony is not the same as “everything equals φ.” Many popular claims overuse the golden ratio by applying it to measurements that are noisy in photos or not consistently linked to perceived balance. That’s why this facial harmony test separates φ-style ratios from classic facial canons.

Classic canons (like facial thirds and the “five eyes” guideline) are widely used in art, photography, and aesthetic analysis. They complement golden ratio comparisons and often explain facial harmony better than a single number.

Finally, alignment matters. If your head is slightly tilted, lighting is uneven, or a lens is too wide, landmarks can shift and your facial harmony scores can drop even if your underlying structure hasn’t changed. Our alignment/symmetry group helps you spot when pose is the main driver.

For the most consistent facial harmony result, use a clear front-facing photo, keep your head level, relax your expression, and avoid strong filters. If you’re tracking changes over time, keep camera distance and lighting similar and run the facial harmony test 2–3 times to compare a stable range.

2. What we analyze

This facial harmony report includes 12 core metrics grouped into four sections:

Golden ratio (φ) key ratios

A small set of more stable ratios that are commonly compared to φ. This keeps the facial harmony signal focused instead of forcing everything into 1.618.

Classic canons (non-φ)

Facial thirds, the “five eyes” guideline, and other classic proportion checks that often explain facial harmony more directly than φ.

Feature proportions

Local ratios for eyes, nose, mouth, and lips that highlight how your features relate to your face width and to each other.

Alignment & symmetry

Midline and level checks that help you tell whether your facial harmony score is influenced by pose, tilt, or landmark instability.

3. How to read your results

Each metric is scored from 0 to 100, where 100 means a perfect match to its target (a φ target, a classic canon target, or a 0-offset alignment target). Your overall facial harmony score is a weighted summary across groups. Start with group scores, then open the cards with the largest deviations.

High (80–100)

Your proportions are close to their targets and your alignment is stable. If the golden ratio group is also strong, your facial harmony profile may resemble what people describe as “golden ratio face” balance.

Medium (60–79)

Most metrics are close, with a few stronger deviations. This is common and often reflects normal variation rather than a “problem.” For facial harmony insight, focus on the 1–2 metrics with the biggest deviations and check whether alignment is affecting them.

Lower (0–59)

Some ratios deviate more, or your photo conditions may be driving landmark shifts. Retest with a clearer, more front-facing photo and look at the alignment group first—pose can pull down facial harmony scores across the board.

4. What to do with your facial harmony report

Spot what’s structural vs. what’s pose

Use the alignment & symmetry section to decide whether to retest. If alignment is low, improve your photo conditions before drawing conclusions about facial harmony.

Use the groups to get actionable takeaways

Golden ratio (φ) ratios describe broad balance; classic canons point to vertical/horizontal structure; feature proportions show local emphasis. Reading facial harmony by group makes patterns clearer than a single score.

Keep it in perspective

Facial harmony is a structured way to compare proportions, not a definition of attractiveness. Style, expression, skin, and confidence matter too. Treat the facial harmony score as a reference you can retest and compare—not a label.

Ready to run your facial harmony test?

Upload a clear photo to get your facial harmony analysis, grouped scores, and a card-by-card breakdown across φ ratios, classic canons, feature proportions, and alignment.