A strawberry blonde bob on straight hair leaves nowhere to hide. The line at the jaw is visible. The shine on the ends is visible. Even the color shift — peach in one patch, copper-gold in another — shows up the second you turn your head.
That’s why this combo can look so sharp when it’s done well. Straight hair gives you a clean canvas, and strawberry blonde gives you warmth without the heaviness that can drag a blunt cut down. Put them together and you get a shape that looks intentional from three feet away, not just “done” in the vague, salon-menu sense.
The catch is that both the cut and the color have to be chosen with some care. Straight hair will expose wonky lines, uneven bevels, and over-thinned ends. Strawberry blonde will expose brassiness, patchy toner, and root color that’s too dark for the rest of the head. The good looks below solve those problems in different ways — some by leaning sleek, some by softening the edge, some by giving the color a little root depth so it doesn’t scream for attention.
Why This Collection Feels Fresh on Straight Hair

- Clean lines show the haircut’s shape: Straight hair lets you see the exact outline of a bob, so a blunt jaw-skimming cut reads crisp instead of fuzzy.
- Warm color stops the cut from feeling flat: Strawberry blonde has copper, peach, and gold notes, and that tonal mix keeps a simple silhouette from looking one-note.
- Small changes make a big difference: A side part, a tiny bevel at the ends, or a half-shade darker root can change the mood of the entire style.
- These cuts are easy to read in mirrors and photos: Straight strands reflect light in a way that shows off gloss, so the color placement matters more than heavy styling.
- Most of them work with one good blow-dry: You don’t need a full hot-tool routine when the cut lands in the right spot.
- They scale well from short to long: A chin-length bob, a collarbone lob, and a micro bob all feel like cousins, not strangers.
1. Jaw-Grazing Blunt Strawberry Blonde Bob
This is the version that looks the most decisive. The hem sits right around the jaw, and on straight hair that line has a kind of punch you can’t fake with layers. A strawberry blonde tone with a peach-gold cast keeps it from feeling severe; the color softens the geometry without blurring it.
The reason it works is simple: the eye has almost nothing to chase except the edge. That makes the cut look denser, which is handy if your hair is fine or medium in thickness. Keep the ends blunt, not wispy. A tiny bevel under the hair with a flat brush and dryer is enough.
Who it suits
- Faces that can handle a hard line at the jaw
- Hair that tends to fall flat without structure
- Anyone who wants polish without a fussy styling routine
A middle part makes this cut feel modern and clean. A soft side part takes off the edge if your jaw is already strong. Either way, keep the finish glossy. Straight hair and a blunt strawberry blonde bob live or die on shine.
2. Chin-Length French Bob With Soft Fringe
The French bob always has a little attitude, and straight hair gives it extra bite. At chin length, the shape lands high enough to show the neck and cheekbones, while a soft fringe keeps the line from feeling too boxy. Strawberry blonde works well here because the warm tone keeps the short length from reading harsh.
What I like about this cut is how little it asks from you. A quick blow-dry, a small round brush, and a touch of smoothing cream usually do the job. If the fringe sits too heavy, it starts to bully the rest of the style. Ask for lightness around the eyes, not a thick wall of hair.
A peachier strawberry blonde shade makes this bob feel airy. A deeper copper-strawberry tone makes it sharper. Both work; they just tell different stories.
3. A-Line Strawberry Blonde Bob With a Subtle Root Shadow
A gentle A-line is the move when you want a little length in front without turning the cut into a dramatic angle. The back sits shorter, the front drapes forward, and straight hair shows the geometry cleanly. Add a root shadow one level deeper than the mids and ends, and the color suddenly has depth instead of looking painted on top.
That root shadow matters more than people think. Strawberry blonde can flatten fast if every strand is the same tone from scalp to tip. A soft root melt gives the eye a place to rest, especially near the part where regrowth would otherwise shout first.
This style suits anyone who wants a bob that feels tidy from the side and easy from the front. It also buys you a little more time between color appointments, which is the practical part most glossy Instagram shots leave out.
4. Mirror-Sleek Center-Part Bob
If you like a severe line done well, this is the one. A center part and a glassy straight finish make the bob look almost architectural. On straight hair, there’s no fighting the texture — you’re just refining what’s already there.
The strawberry blonde needs to be clean here. Think warm beige-copper rather than neon copper. If the color leans too orange, the sleekness starts to feel costume-y. A translucent shine serum on the mid-lengths and ends keeps the surface smooth without looking greasy.
Styling note
A flat iron pass on low to medium heat is enough for most heads of hair. Don’t chase pin-straight perfection at the expense of movement. A bob like this looks better when the ends lie flat but not dead.
One of the nicer things about this cut is how well it pairs with sharp collars, hoops, and dark tops. The contrast lets the hair do the talking.
5. Rounded Bubble Bob With an Inward Curve
This cut has a softer silhouette than a blunt bob, but it still feels deliberate. The ends curve inward just enough to create a rounded “bubble” shape around the face. Straight hair helps the curve hold because the hair doesn’t fight you on the way down.
The color here should stay warm and luminous. A strawberry blonde with gold in it makes the rounded shape look plush. Too much ash and the whole thing can go dull fast. The point is not volume for its own sake. It’s a smooth, contained shape that feels finished.
This is a smart choice if your hair tends to stick out at the ends or you hate the look of thin, separated tips. A rounded bob hides that weakness better than a very sharp, flat cut. It’s also one of the easiest shapes to grow out, which matters more than people admit.
6. Side-Part Bob With Swept-Over Front Pieces
A deep side part changes the mood in a second. The front pieces sweep across the forehead, the volume shifts off-center, and straight hair suddenly looks a little more cinematic. Strawberry blonde gives the style warmth, which matters because a side-part bob can start to feel severe if the color is too cool.
This shape works especially well when one side grazes the cheekbone and the other sits closer to the jaw. That tiny imbalance gives the cut movement without requiring layers everywhere. If you wear glasses, this is one of the better bob choices because the swept front doesn’t crowd the frames.
Don’t overdo the root lift. You want a bend, not a pouf. A small round brush and a quick blast at the roots is enough. Anything bigger starts to fight the clean lines that make the bob look good in the first place.
7. Collarbone Lob With Feathered Ends
The lob is where people land when they want length but still want the bob family’s clean shape. On straight hair, a collarbone-skimming lob gives you enough swing to tuck it behind an ear, clip it back, or wear it blunt. Feathered ends take the edge off and make the hair move instead of hanging like a sheet.
Strawberry blonde looks especially nice at this length because the color has room to show multiple tones. The mids catch the light, the ends pick up peach, and the whole thing looks more dimensional than a shorter cut can sometimes manage. If your hair is fine, ask for internal softness, not visible layers.
This is the most forgiving style in the bunch. You can blow it smooth, bend the ends under, or wear it almost air-dried and still look put together. That flexibility is the point.
8. Tucked-Behind-the-Ear Mini Bob
This one is sharper than it sounds. The length sits short enough that the hair naturally wants to tuck behind the ears, which exposes the jaw and cheekbones in a way longer bobs don’t. Straight hair makes the line neat, and strawberry blonde keeps the short shape from feeling too hard.
What works here is the contrast between polished and slightly casual. One side tucked. One side loose. Maybe a small ear cuff if you like jewelry. It feels deliberate without looking over-managed.
Keep the ends full. A mini bob loses its nerve if the perimeter is thinned too much. The most common mistake is stripping out so much bulk that the ends start to look stringy after one shampoo. A blunt edge fixes that fast.
9. Soft Stacked Bob at the Nape
A stacked bob adds lift at the back without making the whole cut spiky. The layers are tucked in near the nape, which creates a little curve and a little body. On straight hair, that structure gives you shape where you actually need it.
The strawberry blonde shade can lean more copper here because the back stacking already softens the look. If you’re trying to disguise a flat crown, this cut helps because the graduation creates the illusion of fullness. Not magic. Just good geometry.
This style suits hair that needs direction. If your straight strands fall limp at the back of the head, the stacked nape gives them a place to sit. Ask for a gentle stack, not a 2000s wedge. Those are not the same thing, and the difference shows.
10. Asymmetrical Bob With a Longer Front
A slightly longer front piece on one side changes the whole face frame. It gives the bob movement without losing the clean bob shape. On straight hair, the asymmetry reads clearly, which is half the appeal.
This cut looks especially good in strawberry blonde because the color shift catches the longer side as it swings. A few ribbons of lighter peach near the face make the angle look even more pronounced. If your hair is very straight and stubborn, this is one of the easiest ways to make the cut feel intentional instead of accidental.
Best for
- Round faces that benefit from a diagonal line
- Straight hair that needs a little edge
- People who want a bob that doesn’t look identical from every angle
The one caution: the longer side needs to be obviously longer. A tiny unevenness looks like a mistake. A clear angle looks like a choice.
11. Curtain-Bang Bob in Apricot Strawberry Blonde
Curtain bangs can save a bob that feels too plain, and on straight hair they fall with a clean, loose bend that’s easy to manage. The center opens a little, the sides sweep out, and the rest of the bob stays smooth. Apricot-leaning strawberry blonde gives the fringe warmth so it doesn’t disappear against the face.
This look suits people who want softness around the forehead without committing to a heavy fringe. The bangs should start a little lower than a blunt bang would, then drop into the sides of the bob. That shaping matters. Too short and the whole thing gets boxy.
I like this style because it buys a lot of face-framing for a small amount of length. The bob itself can stay simple. The bangs do the talking.
12. Micro-Fringe Bob With a Clean Jawline
A micro fringe is not a shy move. It puts the forehead on display and makes the bob feel editorial, even if the rest of the haircut is simple. Straight hair is the right texture for it because the fringe sits flat and clean instead of puffing out.
Strawberry blonde balances the severity of the short fringe. A warm copper-peach tone keeps the cut from reading too stark, which matters because a micro fringe can get costume-adjacent fast if the color is too intense. If you’re nervous, keep the rest of the bob blunt and let the fringe be the only dramatic thing.
This look works best on someone who likes to get noticed a little. It’s not subtle. That’s the point. The clean jawline and short fringe create one of the strongest silhouettes in the whole list.
13. Razor-Soft Bob With Choppy Ends
A razor-soft bob sounds rougher than it wears. The edge isn’t blunt, but it isn’t shredded either. It lands in that middle space where the ends feel broken up just enough to move. On straight hair, that texture keeps the cut from feeling too blocky.
The strawberry blonde should stay multi-tonal here. A single flat shade makes choppy ends look dry. A mix of peach and gold through the lower half of the hair keeps the texture looking deliberate. This is a good choice if your hair is straight but not especially thick.
A little styling cream through the mids is usually enough. Don’t over-layer it with spray unless you want the ends to separate too much. This cut needs movement, not frizz.
14. Box Bob for Thick Straight Hair
Thick straight hair can hold a strong boxy bob better than almost any other texture. The weight keeps the shape solid, the straightness shows the line, and the strawberry blonde color keeps the whole cut from feeling like a brick. That warmth matters a lot here.
The trick is to keep the perimeter dense while removing bulk inside the shape. You want the outside line to stay crisp. Too much thinning turns thick straight hair into a frayed triangle, and nobody wants that. A box bob should feel controlled, almost tailored.
This is one of the most flattering options if your hair has a lot of natural density. It makes the hair look expensive in the plainest possible way: clean edge, smooth surface, no drama.
15. Inverted Bob With a Sharp Back Angle
An inverted bob leans a little more dramatic than a standard A-line. The back shortens and the front lengthens more noticeably, which creates a clear slope. Straight hair shows that angle beautifully, maybe too beautifully if the cut is sloppy.
Strawberry blonde gives the shape some warmth along the front pieces, where the hair catches the light first. A root shadow helps keep the top from looking too airy or disconnected from the ends. This is the kind of bob that rewards a good cut and punishes a lazy one.
If you like structure, this is a strong pick. If you want something low-key, keep walking. The angle does a lot of the talking here.
16. C-Curl Bob That Hugs the Neck
The C-curl bob is one of those styles that looks more polished than it is hard to wear. The ends bend inward just enough to trace the neck and jaw. On straight hair, that bend holds cleanly, which keeps the silhouette compact and neat.
I’d call this the “quietly organized” bob. It doesn’t shout. It just sits right. Strawberry blonde helps because the warm tones keep the curve from feeling rigid or helmet-like. A little shine spray at the ends and you’re done.
This cut is a favorite when you want hair that looks finished without taking over your face. It works especially well with knit tops, simple earrings, and a middle or soft side part.
17. One-Length Gloss Bob
A one-length bob is where the color and the cut have to carry each other. There are no layers to hide behind, no angle to distract the eye. Straight hair makes the edge exact, and strawberry blonde gives the style enough warmth to feel rich instead of plain.
The gloss matters here. A semi-sheer glaze or shine treatment keeps the surface reflective and prevents the lengths from looking dusty. If the color is too matte, a one-length bob can start to feel unfinished in a hurry.
This is one of the strongest picks for people who like clean lines and low visual noise. It’s blunt, calm, and easy to keep neat. A touch of bevel at the ends keeps it from sticking flat to the neck.
18. Airy Layered Bob for Fine Straight Hair
Fine straight hair can look limp fast, so the layers here need to be internal and soft. You want movement, not holes. A light layered bob gives the crown some lift and prevents the perimeter from looking like a thin strip of hair stuck to the head.
Strawberry blonde helps because the color’s warmth and tonal variation create the illusion of more dimension. A very flat ash blonde would be less forgiving. Ask for soft graduation around the top and mid-lengths, then keep the ends full enough to show a visible line.
This is a good cut if your hair collapses after a few hours. The shape still needs styling, but it won’t vanish the second the humidity changes.
19. Peach-Petal Bob With Pale Ends
This is one of the softer looks in the bunch. The root stays a bit deeper, the mids carry the strawberry tone, and the ends lighten into a pale peach or blush gold. On straight hair, that gradient reads cleanly, almost like a watercolor banding if the transition is done well.
The reason it works is that the bob shape stays simple while the color does the expressive part. You get movement from tone instead of layers. That’s a smart trade if you want the cut to stay sleek.
It’s also a nice choice if you wear soft makeup or warmer clothing colors. The hair and the face don’t fight each other. They sit in the same family.
20. Rooted Strawberry Blonde Bob With a Darker Base
A rooted bob is one of the easiest ways to keep strawberry blonde from looking over-processed. The darker base near the scalp gives the color depth and buys you a little breathing room between appointments. On straight hair, that root melt looks especially polished because there’s no texture to blur the transition.
This is the practical person’s strawberry blonde bob. It still looks warm and fresh, but it’s not demanding constant upkeep. If your natural color is darker blonde or light brown, this version grows out more gracefully than a lighter all-over tint.
The main thing is to keep the root transition soft. A hard line at the scalp looks like a color mistake. A gentle melt looks intentional.
21. Copper Ribbon Highlight Bob
If you want the bob to catch the light every time you move, copper ribbons are the move. Thin, carefully placed highlights add brightness around the face and through the top layer without turning the whole head orange. On straight hair, those ribbons show up cleanly.
This style works especially well with a blunt or slightly curved bob because the color gives the cut motion. The hair itself may be still, but the highlights keep it from feeling static. That matters more than people think when the length is short and the shape is simple.
I’d keep the base shade warm but not too bright. The ribbons should look like light, not stripes. If they stand out too much, the effect starts to look chunky.
22. Apricot-Glaze Lob With a Polished Finish
A lob with an apricot glaze is the most forgiving style in the collection, and maybe the easiest one to live with. The length hits around the collarbone, which gives straight hair a little swing, and the glaze adds a soft warm sheen that makes the color look freshly done. It’s the kind of cut that still looks decent on day three.
This is the one I’d point people to if they want strawberry blonde but don’t want to commit to a sharp short bob. The extra length gives you room to tuck it, clip it, or wear it loose without losing shape. It’s polished, not precious.
A straight lob can fall flat if the ends are too blunt and the color is too one-note. The glaze solves half the problem. A tiny inward bend at the hem solves the rest.
Why Straight Hair Makes Strawberry Blonde Bobs Work So Well
Straight hair puts the outline of a bob on full display. That sounds obvious, but it changes everything in practice. A small asymmetry shows up. A blunt edge shows up. A bad bevel shows up too, which is why the cut has to be done with a steady hand and not much thinning.
Strawberry blonde is a useful color for this texture because it gives light something to do. Copper, peach, gold, and rose tones bounce off straight strands in a way that layered curls often hide. The color can make the shape feel warmer, softer, or sharper depending on how deep the root is and how light the ends are.
The other advantage is control. Straight hair tends to respond well to a smooth blow-dry and a low-heat pass with a flat iron, so the bob doesn’t need a giant styling ritual. If you like hair that looks polished with half an hour of effort, this family of cuts is worth paying attention to.
Tools That Keep These Bobs Looking Crisp

- Blow dryer with a nozzle attachment: The nozzle directs air down the hair shaft, which helps the cut sit smooth instead of puffing.
- Medium round brush: Use this for a slight bend under the ends or for lifting the crown on finer hair.
- Paddle brush: Better for quick smoothing on longer bobs and lobs when you don’t want much shape.
- Flat iron with adjustable heat: Handy for glassy finishes, but keep the temperature moderate so strawberry blonde doesn’t look dull from heat damage.
- Heat protectant spray: Non-negotiable if you use hot tools more than once a week.
- Lightweight shine serum: A pea-sized amount on the mid-lengths and ends gives straight hair that polished surface without grease.
- Tail comb: Useful for creating a clean center part or precise side part.
- Sectioning clips: Straight hair is easier to control in neat sections, especially around the nape and fringe.
- Purple or color-safe shampoo: If your strawberry blonde leans lighter, a color-safe formula keeps the warm tone from getting muddy.
- Glossing treatment or demi-permanent glaze: Nice to have if you want the peach-copper tone to stay bright between salon visits.
How to Talk to Your Stylist About Length, Tone, and Edges

Bring photos, but don’t stop at the photo. Point out what you actually like in each one: the length at the jaw, the root depth, the amount of bend at the ends, the fringe, the part. A lot of bad haircutting happens because people say “like this” and mean three different things at once.
For the color, ask for strawberry blonde in plain language first, then be specific about the tone. Do you want peachier? More copper? More golden and soft? A natural level 7 or 8 base with warm copper-gold ribbons is a different animal from a brighter, more lifted strawberry shade. Those details matter.
If your hair is dark blonde or light brown, a root shadow can make the grow-out kinder. If your hair is already very light, a glaze may be enough. Straight hair tends to show banding, so ask for transitions that look blended when the hair is worn flat and parted in the same place most days.
One more thing. Say how much styling you’re willing to do. A blunt bob cut to sit perfectly smooth with a blowout is not the same thing as a wash-and-go bob with soft movement. Different goal. Different cut.
How to Wear These Bobs Without Fighting the Shape

Presentation: Keep the silhouette clean. Straight bobs look strongest when the ends are either blunt or softly bent under, not frayed in every direction. A quick pass with a brush and dryer usually gives enough polish.
Pairings: These cuts love simple necklines, small hoops, and makeup with warm peach or rose tones. A heavy turtleneck can swallow a jaw-length bob, while a crew neck or open collar lets the line show.
Length Balance: Chin-length cuts bring out the jaw. Collarbone lobs feel softer and give more styling options. If your face is very narrow, a little extra width around the ends can help balance it out.
Product Pairing: Use the lightest possible amount of smoothing cream or serum. Straight hair gets weighed down fast, and strawberry blonde shows buildup on the surface more easily than darker hair does.
Small Adjustments That Change the Whole Look

Tone Enhancement: If your strawberry blonde starts to go flat, ask for a gloss rather than a heavy recolor. A demi-permanent glaze refreshes the copper-peach notes without making the hair look overworked.
Texture Control: Fine straight hair usually likes soft internal layers. Thick straight hair usually likes a strong perimeter and light bulk removal inside the shape. The same bob can fail on one head and sing on another if the density is ignored.
Make-It-Yours: Add curtain bangs if you want movement around the face. Choose a side part if you want lift. Keep it center-parted if you want the cleanest, most direct line.
Color Placement: Face-framing ribbons brighten the skin fastest. A deeper root makes grow-out kinder. Pale ends add softness, but too much lightness can make the bob look dry if your hair is already fine.
Trim Schedules, Color Refreshes, and Day-Two Hair

Short bobs need trims more often than people want to hear. A jaw-length or chin-length bob usually wants a clean-up every 5 to 7 weeks if you want the edge to stay sharp. A lob can stretch to 8 or even 10 weeks, but once the ends start to lose their line, straight hair shows it fast.
Color is a separate job. Strawberry blonde tones, especially the copper-heavy ones, fade faster than neutral blonde shades. A gloss every 4 to 6 weeks keeps the warmth from turning dull or muddy. If your natural base is darker and you’re blending in a root shadow, plan on a color service when the grow-out starts to break the line rather than waiting until it looks obvious.
For day-two styling, dry shampoo at the roots and a flat-iron touch on just the hem can be enough. I’d rather refresh the ends than rewash the whole head when the cut is straight and controlled. Sleeping on a silk pillowcase helps too. So does tucking the hair loosely behind the ears before bed instead of sleeping on a hard bend.
Common Mistakes That Flatten the Cut or Muddy the Color

- Over-thinning the ends: Straight hair already shows the line. If the ends are thinned too much, the bob starts to look wispy and weak. Keep the perimeter full unless your hair is very thick.
- Choosing a copper shade that’s too bright: Loud orange-copper can fight the softness of a bob. A balanced strawberry blonde should read warm, not neon.
- Ignoring your natural part: A center part looks crisp on some faces and lifeless on others. If your hair falls naturally to one side, forcing it back to the middle can make the cut look stiff.
- Letting the roots get too dark: A big contrast at the scalp can make strawberry blonde look patchy. A root shadow is fine. A harsh line is not.
- Using too much serum or oil: Straight hair gets greasy-looking fast. One small drop on the ends is enough. More than that and the bob loses its bounce.
- Skipping trim maintenance: The shape is the whole point. Once the hem starts to fray, the style turns ordinary in a hurry.
Variations Worth Trying If You Want a Different Mood

Cooler Rose-Gold Shift: Pull the strawberry blonde a little pinker and lighter for a softer, cooler read. This works well if your skin tone leans neutral and you don’t want heavy copper near the face.
Deeper Copper Root Melt: Keep the root a touch darker and the mids richer. It gives straight hair depth and makes the grow-out look purposeful instead of neglected.
Air-Dry Friendly Soft Bob: Ask for less visible layering and a rounded perimeter. This version won’t be as razor-clean as a blowout bob, but it can sit nicely with a little cream and a quick finger comb.
Bangs-Forward Version: Add curtain bangs or a slim fringe if you want the haircut to feel more face-focused. Straight hair makes bangs easier to read, so they can become the main feature without competing with the bob.
Long Lob Conversion: If you’re nervous about going short, stretch the same color idea down to the collarbone. The strawberry blonde still gives warmth, and the longer length buys you more styling slack.
Questions People Ask Before They Cut Their Hair

Will strawberry blonde fade fast on straight hair?
Usually, yes, a little faster than neutral tones, especially if the shade leans copper. Straight hair doesn’t change the fade rate much; washing frequency and heat styling do most of that work. A gloss every few weeks keeps the tone from going flat.
What bob length works best if my hair is very fine?
A jaw-length blunt bob or a softly layered lob usually gives fine hair the most help. Both keep the ends looking full. A heavily textured cut can make fine straight hair look thinner than it is.
Can I wear bangs with a strawberry blonde bob?
Absolutely, and straight hair is a good texture for it. Curtain bangs are the easiest place to start because they grow out well and don’t box the face in as hard as a blunt fringe.
Do I need highlights, or can it be one color?
One color works if you want a simpler look and your base is already light enough. Highlights, ribbons, or a soft root shadow give more depth and help the bob look less flat, which is useful on straight hair.
How often should I trim a short bob?
Every 5 to 7 weeks is a safe range if you want the outline to stay sharp. If you let it go much longer, the shape can drop and the whole point of the cut starts to blur.
What if my hair is thick and straight?
Then you can handle a boxier outline or a stacked back. Thick straight hair tends to hold shape well, but it also needs bulk removed from the inside so the bob doesn’t sit like a block.
Is this color hard to keep from going brassy?
It can be if the tone is too copper-heavy and the hair is washed a lot. Color-safe shampoo, cool water on the final rinse, and a glaze schedule help keep it warm instead of brassy.
Does a center part work on every face shape?
No, and that’s fine. A center part sharpens the look, but a side part can soften stronger jaws, widen very narrow faces, or give more lift where you need it.
The Shape That Makes Straight Hair Easy to Live With

A good strawberry blonde bob on straight hair doesn’t need a lot of decoration. It needs clean geometry, a warm color with some depth, and an edge that lands where the face can use it. That’s the whole trick. Get those three things right and the haircut starts doing half the styling for you.
What I like about this family of looks is how much range it has. You can go blunt and bright, soft and rooted, short and sharp, or long enough to tuck behind your ear and forget about until dinner. Straight hair gives the line. Strawberry blonde gives the glow.
If you’re taking one idea away, make it this: the best version of the cut is the one that matches how much upkeep you’ll actually do. The rest is just mood.












