arched bangs - For bangs curving upward
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Hair that drapes forward to hang in front of the forehead. Known in British English as a fringe.
Types of bangs
blunt bangs - For straight-cut unparted bangs
braided bangs - For bangs that have been braided. (See more)
diagonal bangs - For bangs that are cut in an odd diagonal line
dyed bangs - For bangs that are colored differently from the rest of the hair (See wiki for further explanation)
swept bangs - For bangs loosely combed to one side
parted bangs - For distinctly parted bangs
curtained hair - For bangs that briefly arches upward then hangs back down while the bangs part to the side
asymmetrical bangs - For bangs worn half combed back, half loose
crossed bangs - For bangs that criss-cross each other on the forehead
choppy bangs - For bangs with thin gaps of air between them
long bangs - For unusually long bangs that go past the eyes at least
short bangs - For bangs short enough to at least fully show the eyebrows
hair over eyes - For long bangs that cover the eyes
hair covering eyes - (Alias with hair over eyes)
hair over one eye - For bangs that cover a single eye
hair between eyes - For bangs that are found between eyes. (Often paired with crossed bangs)
double-parted bangs - For bangs that are distinctly parted in two different spots
center-flap bangs - A combination of blunt bangs and double-parted bangs that results in a distinctive flap of hair
- fanged bangs - For bangs with thin longer sides
- wispy bangs - For bangs with large gaps of air between them
- v-bangs - A variant of blunt bangs that are longer in the middle than the sides and come to a distinct point in the center, forming a "V" shape on the forehead.
The following tags implicate this tag: asymmetrical_bangs, blunt_bangs, crossed_bangs, diagonal_bangs, dyed_bangs, long_bangs, parted_bangs, and swept_bangs (learn more).