Layered Salt-and-Pepper Shag

The shag is a heavily layered, slightly undone cut with a built-in fringe. It re-emerges every decade because it adds movement to flat hair and softens features without looking fussy.

Salt-and-pepper is the most natural way to wear gray, blending darker base hair with brighter strands. It needs almost no maintenance beyond a purple shampoo every other wash to keep the lighter pieces from yellowing.

Why this works on a oblong face. Oblong or long faces look best with width at the sides, often through a soft fringe and curl or wave around the cheekbones, which visually shortens a longer face. Width at the cheekbones, length minimized at the crown. A horizontal-feeling cut — heavy fringe, side-sweeping waves, even tucked-behind-ear styling — visually shortens the face.

On straight hair. On straight hair, the precision of this cut is everything — every line is visible. A flat-iron pass with heat protectant gives the polished, glassy finish the shape was designed for. A blow-dry primer, a smoothing serum, and a satin pillowcase will keep the polish overnight. Straight hair shows every product flake, so apply each layer to damp — never dry — hair, and brush through before air-exposure.

The layered variation softens the silhouette compared with a straight shag — most women in their 50s and 60s find that a touch of intentional looseness reads younger than a strictly geometric cut, while still keeping the polish of a deliberate shape.

Maintenance. Trims every 6 weeks; a texture spray is the only product needed day-to-day.

Daily styling. Texture spray on damp hair, scrunched and air-dried, is the entire routine. A curling wand can be used to tap a few face-framing pieces if the layers fall flat, but the cut is designed to look slightly undone — so resist the urge to over-polish.

When this isn't the right cut. If your hair is bone-straight and refuses to hold a bend, the shag will look stringy rather than shaggy. Add a soft body-wave perm or pick a layered cut without the heavy fringe.

Try-it tip. Try the look on a digital try-on app first if you're nervous — it removes the guesswork without committing the scissors.

How to ask for this at the salon

Tell your stylist you'd like a shags with a layered finish, in a salt and pepper tone. Bring a photo of the silhouette and discuss your growth pattern at the consultation — most fit issues come from cowlicks at the crown or temples that the cut needs to work around. For deeper context on the cut category, read our complete guide to Shags.

More Shags in this library

Other looks in Salt and Pepper

Different cut categories — same color story.