Facial definition (angularity + leanness)
Jawline

- An attractive outline of the male face should be angular.
- The angles are formed where different parts of the face meet, such as: ogee curve, between zygos and jaw (slight concavity, often reffered as outward gonions), ramus (defined from the neck) and mandible body (slight concavity between gonion and chin). Chin alone should be defined, wide and square.
- Some angularity can also be present inside the center of the face and not only the borders, such as refined nose tip (instead of bulbulous) and lateral zygomatic shadow (lateral hollow cheeks) and angular shaped eyebrows.
Hollow cheeks
- Refer to a facial aesthetic characterized by a sunken or concave appearance in the area between the cheekbones and the lower jaw.
- This feature creates a sculpted and more defined look, emphasizing the cheekbones and jawline.
- Hollow cheeks are present when there’s a significant zygomatic bonemass, low facial bf% and good skin elasticity.
- Individuals with low set cheekbones, more bonesmass and higher facial bf% typically see a straight shadow, starting at lower portion of the cheeks down to chin, which appears feminine but still quite universally attractive (Example: young Johnny Depp).
- High set cheekbones with lower bonemass and low facial bf% typically appear more as a hollowed region between the mouth and masseters and vertically up to the upper portion of zygomatic bones. This creates a more striking, masculine appearance (Example: male model Sean O'Pry).
Example 1:

Hollow cheeks caused by low set cheekbones with more bonesmass and higher facial bf%.
Example 2:

Hollow cheeks caused by high set cheekbones with less bonemass and low facial bf%.