X

6 Medium-Length Hairstyles To Avoid Getting Over 50 Because They Age You So Fast, Pros Say—And What To Get Instead For A Youthful Look

April 11, 2024 by Marissa Matozzo

 
Shutterstock

Looking to try a new haircut this spring that perfectly complements your style and personality? Heading to a salon might just be the thing you need to feel refreshed. However, finding the perfect ‘do after 50 can be a daunting task, given the plethora of options available.

One way to guarantee success during your salon visit is to bring a picture of your favorite celebrity style. But it’s also important to consider your face shape and hair texture, so you can pick a hairstyle that flatters your features. To make the selection process easier for you, we reached out to hair experts who have shared seven dated hairstyles to avoid for mature beauties, and top-notch alternatives to try instead.

Read on for tips, suggestions and insight from Ghanima Abdullah, hair expert and cosmetologist at The Right Hairstyles, Gina Rivera, celebrity hair stylist and founder of Phenix Salon Suites, Dani Everson, professional hair stylist at Clementine’s Salon, Janine Jarman, celebrity hair stylist and founder of Curl Cult and Lauren Udoh, hair stylist and hair creative director of WigReports.

7 Aging Hairstyles To Avoid Over 50—And Chic Alternatives

1. Skip Lobs With Baby Bangs

The timeless appeal of baby bangs has been showcased by a variety of fashion icons over the years, ranging from Bettie Page and Audrey Hepburn to modern trendsetters like Emma Watson, Emma Roberts, and Krysten Ritter.

Despite its popularity, hair specialist Everson advises mature women to exercise caution when considering this cut due to potential negative effects. "I love bangs and think everyone has their own special length that enhances their features," she says, adding that "no two bangs are the same." Baby bangs, she stresses, can "overshare someone's wrinkle story," drawing the eye to sagging skin rather than creating a look that has an upwards or lifting effect.

"The right length of bangs can help make someone's appearance youthful, but too short borders the line between baby-ish and also aging," she advises.

Abdullah agrees that bangs ending before the eyebrows can emphasize forehead wrinkles rather than highlight a woman's cheekbones and attractive features like other hairstyles. "Wherever your bangs fall, that is the feature they will emphasize the most," she explains.

Instead, Try A Lob With Curtain Bangs

"You don't want short bangs that fall right in the middle of your forehead where you might have a few lines," Abdullah continues. Instead, she recommends cutting your bangs at your eyebrow level "to emphasize your eyes."

This, paired with face-framing layering in your collarbone-length lob can provide a much more flattering look overall, she notes. Instead of choosing the popular yet often unbecoming baby bangs, one can opt for chic curtain bangs, Abdullah suggests. "These flatter just about any face at any age and neatly frame the face while drawing attention away from serious aging signs," she continues.

Curtain bangs, Abdullah notes, are a type of fringe cut that creates a soft, natural looking wave at the top of the head, as seen here on Kerry Washington. "They are often used to frame the face and specifically, to give it a youthful appearance," she adds, which "look great on mature women" as they make your face appear "smaller and slimmer when they come down to cheek level."

2. Skip Center-Parted Lobs Without Layers

Middle-parts can create a symmetrical look at any age, but Abdullah stresses that they can also draw more attention to forehead wrinkles and make your tresses look flatter.

"A bob with a center part might have been your go-to hairstyle before, but maybe your part seems to be getting wider and wider," Abdullah acknowledges, as thinning in the crown area is common as many age.

"If you're thinning in the crown of your head, a center part is going to draw attention to it. This is because you're putting the part right in the same area," she says. To avoid this, Abdullah recommends a side part for more volume and a youthful energy.

Instead, Add Layers And A Deep Side Part

"Try a side part [with more layers] instead. In this manner, you can move the hair from one side to the other, as you wish," she notes. The "added hair going over," like Charlize Theron here, "will increase volume in the area as well, especially if your hair is used to being parted down the center."

If you really prefer a center part, she suggests making "a short one instead, so that the hair in front goes to either side of your face." Then, she adds, the hair in the center can be brushed back. "Any difference that you create when your hair is used to lying flat and completely to the sides will create volume and make a big difference," she says.

3. Skip Shaggy Lobs With Long Bangs

While shag cuts are iconic, 70s-esque and trendy (and usually flattering for any face shape when paired with no-fail curtain bangs), adding too many layers can head into mullet territory. Shags, Abudllah points out, can easily be cut to frame your face and best features, but adding a heavy amount of layers can often do the opposite. The worst haircut you can have if your goal is to look younger is having "too many layers," she explains.

Layers, when cut appropriately, can help to "add volume" and flow to your hair, "giving the appearance of fuller locks," she notes. Adding too many layers, on the other hand, she notes, "can make your hair appear even more limp than before." Too much texturization in a hairstyle can make thin hair appear even thinner, rather than full, she warns. "While shags are fashionable, it's vital to avoid over-layering thin hair because it can make it difficult to work with and lifeless," she advises.

Instead, Rock A Shag With Eyebrow-Grazing Fringe

Rivera adds that a short or medium-length, delicately layered shag with eyebrow-grazing bangs (Halle Berry is a fan!) is an "amazing cut that is well-recognized for being versatile. A shag with layers of different lengths offers "nice variations for both longer and shorter hair," she says.

"Adding a bang can add a fresh surprise to this look, she suggests. For anyone with hair on the longer side, Rivera concludes that "an added choice is to shorten the hair up a bit to the collarbone or above" to create some texture by "adding subtle layers to soften."

4. Skip Pin-Straight Long Hair

If you have "fine, thinning, fragile, damaged hair," Jarman recommends "cutting it off." She adds that "healthy hair is always the best bet. If your hair is thin, it only gets thinner as it grows out and if it’s damaged it will only continue to break the longer it gets."

Rivera agrees in that "long, straight, blunt hair" is not always becoming with age.

“The long length can pull the features down and make them appear more drawn,” Rivera says, “If you select longer hair, it’s important to opt for longer layers that will create movement and texture," she advises.

Instead, Try Face-Framing Layers

"Longer side bangs" and "face framing pieces" a la Jennifer Aniston can "also result in a more youthful appearance by drawing the eye to the appealing facial features," Rivera explains. "In general, this provides for a fresher and more youthful look."

5. Skip Bobs That Fall At The Mid-Neck Area

A bob looks the best when it ends at the chin or at the collarbone, Abdullah says. If your bob ends at the middle of your neck, she stresses that this could make you look older, even if that is not the goal.

The thing about bobs and lobs, Abdullah says, is that they fall "right where you want to draw attention." A longer, mid-length bob would fall "right at the neck." For a woman who's over 40, Abdullah says, this could be a spot where "fine lines and wrinkles" could be more apparent.

Instead, Try A Collarbone-Length, Layered Bob Or Lob

"When I see a woman with a medium bob, my eye is always drawn to the neck, right where the hair falls," Abdullah stresses. "A bob is great if you want the eyes drawn to the chin or cheekbones, and lobs are great for moving the eye towards the collarbone and shoulders, but medium-length bobs are not as flattering" for mature women, she explains.

Instead, a chin-length or collarbone-length cut like Cate Blanchett's above might look more refreshed and radiant!

6. Skip Chin-Length Lobs with Blunt Bangs

According to Abdullah, if you're aiming to achieve a more youthful appearance, you should avoid the blunt, chin-length bob hairstyle accompanied by blunt fringe. This hairstyle may not work in your favor as it has the potential to make you look older than your actual age.

Abdullah warns that adding this kind of bangs to a chin-length bob (or slightly longer lob) can also highlight the effects of aging without enhancing your best features.

Thick, blunt bangs "push all the attention to the eyes, with all their lines.” This, she says, is seen as a very classic chic look, but it can make you look older if not cut with voluminous layers to frame your face shape.

Instead, Try a Layered Lob with Curtain Fringe

"Like the lob with blunt bangs, the bob emphasizes the eye area, which might not look dewy," Abdullah says. "Then, it also emphasizes the jaw area, an area that many of us struggle with as we age."

Her alternate suggestion is also to ask for the ever-so-stylish curtain bangs, since they “flatter just about any face at any age,” with any length, as well, as seen here on January Jones. “They neatly frame the face while drawing attention away from serious aging signs,” she points out. Good to know!

Load more...