
Looking for the perfect medium-length hairstyle that flatters and enhances your beauty as you embrace your 70s? Medium-length styles are a fantastic choice because they offer versatility and manageability, making it easy to achieve a polished look without hours of styling. Whether you prefer soft waves, sleek bobs, or voluminous curls, there’s a chic option tailored for you.
Consider adding subtle layers to boost volume and movement, especially if your hair is thinning. For a touch of elegance, opt for soft waves or a sleek blowout that highlights your natural beauty. Ready to discover your next look? Let’s explore all these inspiring hair ideas and find the perfect one for you!

#1: Textured Shoulder-Length Waves with Soft Bangs
This lovely hairstyle features textured shoulder-length waves complemented by soft bangs, perfect for women over 70. The hair exhibits a natural wave pattern, adding volume and movement, ideal for fine to medium hair types. This cut enhances round or oval face shapes beautifully. Styling is simple; a lightweight mousse can enhance the waves without weighing them down. Consider maintaining this look with regular trims to keep the shape fresh and vibrant.


#2 Platinum Shoulder-Length Cut with Interior Layers and Face-Framing Pieces
As a New York stylist and mom, I’d call this a shoulder-length, interior-layered cut with long face-framing pieces and a soft inward flip – ideal for an oval face. The hair is fine-to-medium with medium density and a small crown cowlick that gives natural lift. Color is a blended platinum/gray with a subtle root shadow for easy gray blending. Benefits: frames features and adds movement; downsides: very fine hair may need volumizing product and a round-brush blowout, and pale blondes can reveal porosity/brassiness.


#3 Golden Rounded Mid-Length Blowout with Crown Lift and Soft Face-Framing
I’m a NYC stylist and mom – this shoulder-length rounded blowout uses long interior layers and a subtle face-framing graduation to create natural crown lift and soft bounce. Best on oval faces with medium-fine wavy hair and medium density; benefits are instant volume, flattering framing and a warm root-to-midtone blend with delicate silver at the part. Downsides: it requires a round-brush blowout (or hot rollers) to keep the flipped ends and won’t hold as well on very coarse, tight curls.


#4 Warm Chestnut Shoulder-Length Lob with Subtle Root Brightening and Interior Bevel
I’d call this a shoulder-length lob with an interior bevel that tucks under to create a soft face frame; perfect on an oval face. Hair is medium-fine with medium density and a mostly straight texture with a touch of natural bend. Benefits: natural lift at the crown, soft movement, and the subtle root brightening makes the gray at the part read like highlights. Downsides: the inward turn needs a controlled blowout or round-brush skill and won’t hold as well on very coarse curls; ask for long interior layers and a root-softening gloss to blend the silver.


#5 Voluminous Chestnut Layered Mid-Length with Face-Framing Lift
As a New York stylist-mom, I’d call this a shoulder-length rounded mid-length with long face-framing layers and soft interior feathering. Hair reads fine-to-medium with healthy density and complements an oval face. Benefits: built-in crown lift, soft movement and youthful framing; great if you want volume without weight. Drawbacks: the flipped ends need a quick round-brush blowout and light styling product, and the subtle silver at the center part will need lowlight or glossing if you want it blended.


#6 Ash-Beige Shoulder-Length Lob with Soft Interior Layers
I’m a NYC hairstylist, wife and mom – this ash-beige shoulder-length lob sits at the shoulder with soft interior layers and a shallow side part that creates a gentle crown lift. Face: oval. Hair: straight, fine-medium density. Benefits: interior layers add movement and visual fullness; cool ash lowlights give depth without heavy lift. Drawbacks: needs a round-brush undercurl blowout or light smoothing iron and a demi-perm gloss to prevent brass and tame flyaways. Unique detail: tiny temple baby hairs and a subtle micro crown lift here deliver natural height without teasing, great if you want volume without backcombing.


#7 Root-Softened Layered Shoulder-Length Cut with Crown Lift
I’m a New York stylist and mom. This shoulder-length cut uses long interior layers with a rounded, face-framing perimeter and subtle crown elevation. Length hits the collarbone on an oval face; hair is straight with a gentle wave and medium density. Benefits: airy lift, natural gray blended with subtle ashy-bronze lowlights for warmth and movement without bulk. Drawbacks: the flipped ends need a round-brush blowout or hot tool and a root-smudge glaze helps harmonize the silver contrast.


#8 Radiant Copper Shoulder-Length Cut with Underturned Layers
I’m a NYC hairstylist, 45, wife and mom – this shoulder-length copper cut features long underturned layers and light interior graduation to create soft swing and a natural crown lift that masks a subtle crown cowlick. Best for oval faces with straight fine-to-medium hair and medium density. Benefits: movement, easy blowout, and visible lift; disadvantages: red requires periodic glazing and fine hair can show frizz. I used point-cut ends and short interior layers for weight removal and lift.


#9 Chestnut Shoulder-Length Rounded Layers with Side Part and Soft Flip
I’m a New York stylist and mom – this shoulder-length chestnut cut uses long interior layers and rounded ends with a deep side part to add lift at the roots and a soft outward flip at the tips. Ideal for oval faces and over-70 clients with fine-to-medium, slightly wavy hair: it restores movement and frames the cheekbones. Benefits: lightweight shape, natural-looking color depth from subtle lowlights, and easy styling when you use a medium round brush or low-heat iron. Disadvantages: the flip needs brief daily heat styling to hold and a clear gloss or demi glaze helps prevent brassy warmth; interior layering must be done precisely to avoid a hollow crown.


#10 Warm Ginger Mid-Length Layers with Root-Sculpted Lift
Listen, I’m a NYC stylist and mom – this warm ginger mid-length layered cut has long face-framing pieces and low-angle interior layers for a feathered flip and root-sculpted lift. Ideal for oval faces with fine-to-medium, slightly wavy hair and medium-high density. Benefits: instant fullness, soft movement, flattering cheekbone framing. Drawbacks: color needs demi-glossing to stay vibrant and the flipped ends require a round-brush finish. Unique: the tiny crown cowlick is shaped into natural lift rather than fought.


#11 Feathered Shoulder-Length Cut with Wispy Center Fringe
I’m a 45-year-old New York stylist and mom – this shoulder-length feathered cut with a wispy center fringe is great for an oval face; the fine-to-medium, slightly wavy hair and medium density gain lift from a stacked interior graduation at the crown and soft, rounded ends for a polished flip. Benefits: airy movement, subtle silver-to-platinum blend that brightens complexion and gentle bangs that soften the forehead. Drawbacks: fringe grows out quickly and will need shaping, and fine hair will require root-lifting styling or light product to preserve the roundness.


#12 Sunlit Caramel Shoulder-Length Layers with Rounded Ends
The root shadow on this is so quiet you might miss it, which is the whole point. There’s maybe a half inch of natural depth at the base that melts into a warm caramel, and whoever did this knew exactly how much contrast to leave because it reads like sun damage in the best possible way. I’ve seen this same technique go sideways so many times when the formula gets too ashy at the root, but here the warmth stays consistent all the way through.
This is a collarbone cut with interior layers doing the heavy lifting for volume, and the rounded ends give it that flip at the bottom that looks effortless but absolutely required a round brush and heat to get there. Fine to medium hair with medium density and a slight wave underneath. Without a blowout, this cut is going to look like a completely different haircut, and not necessarily one you’d choose. That’s worth knowing before you commit. If your texture runs coarser or thicker, the flip becomes frizz and the whole shape loses its composure pretty fast.
The crown lift is real and it’s coming from how the layers were cut internally rather than stacked on top, which keeps the surface smooth while still getting movement where it matters. On an oval face this framing is going to feel natural and easy, though honestly the length and shape are forgiving enough that face shape isn’t the main concern here. The main concern is whether you’re willing to style it every time you wash it.


#13 Warm Root-Shadowed Mid-Length Layers with Face-Framing Rounds
The ends here are doing something I love, they’re rounded inward just enough that the whole shape feels like it has a plan without looking stiff. This is a mid-length cut sitting between shoulder and collarbone, with long face-framing layers and interior layering that gives the crown real lift from underneath. The density is medium-thick with soft natural waves, which is honestly the sweet spot for this kind of cut because you get movement without having to manufacture it.
I had a client once who brought in a photo almost identical to this and was convinced it wouldn’t work on her because her hair “never holds shape.” Turned out the issue was never the cut, it was that every stylist she’d been to left the ends blunt and heavy. The rounded ends here are the quiet detail most people scroll past, but they’re what keeps the whole thing from looking like hair that just grew out of a better haircut.
Color is warm beige-blonde with a subtle root shadow and fine babylights threaded through to blend gray, and whoever did this was restrained in the best way because the babylights don’t compete with the base. That root shadow buys you a few extra weeks before regrowth starts looking intentional-in-a-bad-way. There’s natural lift at the part from the growth pattern, and the colorist clearly worked with it instead of fighting it, letting the lighter pieces fall where the hair already wants to separate.
This will not look like this without heat styling. A round-brush blowout or at minimum a pass with a large-barrel iron is part of the deal, and if that sounds like too much on a Wednesday morning, this isn’t your cut. The toning maintenance is real too, warm blondes drift brassy fast and there’s no shortcut around that.


#14 Warm Cinnamon Root-Smudged Layered Mid-Length Cut
The root smudge here is doing something I don’t see enough people attempt, which is sitting in that narrow window between warm and muddy where cinnamon tones actually read natural instead of like a box dye gone sideways. I spent a whole summer trying to get this exact melt on a client with similar density and kept pulling too warm at the mid-shaft, so when I see it done right it genuinely stops me for a second.
This is a shoulder-grazing mid-length with long interior layers and feathered ends, paired with babylights that are so subtle you’d miss them if the light weren’t catching the right way. The density here is good, fine to medium texture with enough body that the layers don’t collapse on themselves, and there’s a natural lift happening right at the parietal ridge from the crown’s growth pattern that gives the whole shape some architecture without any teasing or product. That lift is doing more than most people would notice, it’s the reason the volume near the part looks intentional rather than flat.
Face-framing pieces are soft enough to blur temple thinning if that’s something you’re dealing with. That part works. What doesn’t is the maintenance reality of those feathered ends, because without a round-brush blowout they just hang there. You will not get this bend from air drying. The cinnamon root smudge will also shift toward brass over time and need glossing, and if you’re someone who stretches salon visits, that warm tone can start looking unintentional fast. If you’re okay owning the blowout commitment this is a genuinely beautiful cut, but it is not a wash-and-go situation and pretending otherwise would be a disservice.


#15 Soft Layered Medium-Length Cut with Face-Framing Feathered Ends
The crown lift here is doing something most people won’t clock, there’s a very intentional bit of elevation right at the top that keeps the whole silhouette from going flat against her head. It’s one of those details that separates a haircut that photographs well from one that just exists. I actually had a client years ago who kept bringing me photos of cuts like this and couldn’t figure out why hers never looked the same, and it turned out her previous stylist was skipping the internal layering entirely and just shaping the perimeter. That’s the thing about a cut like this. The parts you can’t see are carrying it.
This is shoulder length with soft layers and feathered pieces around the face, sitting on what looks like fine to medium density hair with a warm brown-gray blend that’s got some porosity to it. The layering uses long internal sections with point cutting at roughly a 45 degree angle, which is what gives it that sense of movement without making the ends look stringy or thin. It works well on oval faces and does a genuinely nice job of blending gray in a way that looks like it belongs there rather than like something being managed.
Here’s where I won’t sugarcoat it. Fine hair at this density will go flat by mid-afternoon without root lift product, and that’s not a sometimes problem, that’s a daily reality. The warm tones in the gray blend will also shift muddy within a few weeks unless you’re refreshing with a demi-gloss glaze, which is an added cost and an added appointment most people don’t budget for. If low maintenance is the goal, this isn’t it.


#16 Voluminous Auburn Layered Medium-Length Curls with Face-Framing Lift
This color is doing something sneaky that I almost missed the first time I looked at it. There’s a ribbon of cooler tone woven right along the face framing pieces, sitting underneath the warmer auburn surface, and it’s the kind of detail that makes the whole thing feel dimensional without looking “highlighted” in that obvious way. I had a client once who brought in a photo almost identical to this and got frustrated when her colorist matched the auburn perfectly but skipped that tonal contrast near the face, and honestly it made the entire result fall flat. That cooler thread is doing so much of the work here.
Shoulder length with interior graduation, so the weight line sits higher than you’d expect and pushes volume into the mid-lengths rather than letting everything hang heavy at the ends. Long layers frame the face without creating that curtain effect where your hair just sort of splits and lays there. The crown has natural lift that gives the whole shape its structure, and without that, you’d need to manufacture a lot of this body yourself.
This is a medium-fine, wavy texture with enough density to hold the volume you’re seeing. If your hair is genuinely thick and coarse, this cut will triangle out on you and no amount of layering will fix it. Fine hair without wave will go limp by noon. The graduation helps, but it’s not magic.
The auburn tone reads warm and rich in good lighting but it will fade fast, especially if you’re washing more than twice a week. That’s not a styling problem you can work around, it’s just the reality of red-leaning pigment. A round brush blowout or a diffuser with a medium barrel iron will get you close to this finish, and you’ll need something for frizz control because the interior layers want to separate and puff when humidity shows up.
If your face runs rounder or wider through the jaw, those long face-framing pieces will actually work in your favor here since they narrow everything visually without looking like they’re trying to.


#17 Chestnut Shoulder-Length Lob with Subtle Root Shadow and Face-Framing Waves
The waves here aren’t from a curling iron, they’re from how the layers fall when the interior is cut shallow enough to let the hair move on its own. That’s the part most people miss when they see a lob like this and think it’s all styling. It’s not. The point-cut ends do most of the work, giving fine-to-medium hair a softness at the bottom that a blunt cut just can’t replicate, and the root smudge blending into lowlights means you’re not staring down a harsh grow-out line in six weeks. I had a client once who brought in a photo almost identical to this and was convinced she needed more volume on top, when really she needed less weight through the middle. Took some convincing.
This is a shoulder-length lob with long face-framing pieces that curve inward just slightly, which on an oval face creates a really natural frame without looking like you’re trying to hide anything. The crown area has some natural lift that the shallow interior layers work with rather than against, though keeping those waves consistently defined is going to require some light heat styling because without it the texture tends to go flat by day two. That’s the honest trade-off with this length and density. Fine hair loves a lob until it doesn’t, and the difference is usually whether someone is willing to spend ten minutes with a round brush every other morning. The color is doing a lot of quiet work here too, the lowlights adding dimension that makes the hair look thicker than it probably is on its own.


#18 Rich Chestnut Side-Parted Medium Waves with Soft Interior Layers
Shoulder-grazing medium length with a deep side part and 3-4″ interior layers that create that smooth outward flip-ideal for an oval face and medium-density, fine-to-medium textured hair. Benefits: adds crown lift, softens jawline and gives salon-blowout movement. Downsides: the rounded finish needs a large-round-brush blow-dry or hot rollers; color fares best with a demi-gloss to preserve the warm chestnut and that subtle copper ribbon highlight at the part.


#19 Voluminous Copper Mid-Length Layers with Soft Interior Turn
I’m a 45-year-old stylist and mom from NYC – this mid-length (below collarbone) layered cut with interior graduation and long face-framing layers flatters an oval 70+ client with fine-medium natural waves and good density. The warm single-process copper with a demi-gloss boosts shine; benefits are lift, movement and soft framing, drawbacks are red maintenance and the need for round-brush styling to keep the under-turn.


#20 Soft Silver-Rooted Shag with Wispy Fringe and Face-Framing Layers
This shoulder-grazing, medium-length shag with a wispy fringe and face-framing layers suits an oval face and works well on fine-to-medium, naturally wavy hair with medium density. I used micro-layers at the crown and feathered point-cut ends to create lift and movement; benefit – it adds volume and soft framing without bulk; disadvantage – the fringe and root-blend need styling with a textured blow-dry and light product to avoid limpness.


#21 Warm Caramel Root-Melt Medium-Length Blowout with Interior Layers
Every salon I’ve worked in has had at least one client who sits down and pulls up a photo like this, and half the time what they’re responding to isn’t even the cut. It’s the way the color catches light right at the part, where a small cluster of natural white strands sits undyed and just blends into the warmth around it. That little detail does more than most highlights ever could, and I don’t think it’s accidental.
The cut itself is medium length, landing below the shoulders, with long interior layers that build crown lift without removing weight from the ends. The face-framing pieces are feathered rather than blunt, which keeps everything feeling soft and open. A low-contrast root melt pulls a warm caramel tone through the mid-lengths, and whoever did this was careful not to lift too high at the root so the grow-out stays quiet for weeks.
This will not air-dry the way it looks in the photo. You need a round brush or a hot tool to get that kind of polished movement from fine-to-medium wavy hair at this density, and if that sounds like too much for a Tuesday morning, it probably is. The caramel tone also fades faster than most people expect, so periodic glossing is part of the deal whether you planned on it or not. On very coarse or extremely sparse hair, this specific layering pattern loses its shape quickly and the volume at the crown flattens out instead of holding. For medium-density hair that has some natural wave to work with, though, this is one of those cuts that genuinely earns compliments because the color and the structure are doing something together rather than competing.


#22 Strawberry Blonde Medium-Length Feathered Layers with Soft Curtain Fringe
This shoulder-grazing cut uses feathered, face-framing layers and a soft curtain fringe to add movement to fine, low-to-medium density hair. Great for oval faces: layers create crown lift and disguise thin areas; the natural strawberry-blonde with subtle babylights breaks up regrowth. Benefits: airy volume and softer forehead line. Drawbacks: needs a round-brush blowout or light styling product to maintain shape and the silver temple strands will still peek through unless toned.


#23 Chestnut Rounded Medium-Length Cut with Soft Micro-Bangs
This is one of those cuts that photographs so well you almost don’t notice how much intention went into the layering until you look closer at the interior. The slicing through the mid-lengths is what gives it that rounded, flipping-under shape without the hair looking stacked or heavy at the ends, and the chestnut color has this faint red sheen at the crown that only catches light at certain angles. It’s the kind of detail a colorist adds on purpose but hopes looks accidental, which is sort of the whole game with good hair color.
The micro-bangs are doing a lot here and they’re also the thing most likely to annoy you within two weeks. They need daily smoothing, full stop. If you’re someone who air-dries and walks out the door, these will fight you every morning and eventually you’ll pin them back and wonder why you bothered. On straight, fine-to-medium density hair with an oval face this works because the long face-framing layers pull your eye down and create movement where fine hair tends to just sit there, and the rounded shape lifts right at the jawline in a way that’s genuinely flattering. It also does a quiet job of masking mild temple thinning if that’s something you’re thinking about. Coarse texture is a different story. The under-flip relies on the hair cooperating, and coarse hair has its own plans.


#24 Copper Curtain Bangs with Face-Framing Feathered Layers
This copper is doing something most coppers don’t, which is looking like it actually grew out of someone’s head. There’s a darker band sitting right at the temple that reads as natural shadow, and I’d bet good money it was placed there intentionally to create the illusion of density near the part. It’s the kind of detail that separates a color job you notice from one you just feel without being able to explain why.
The layers are cut on a 45-degree angle, which is what gives the ends that flipped, almost vintage roundness through the mid-lengths and gets the crown sitting up instead of lying flat. Curtain bangs frame everything without committing to a full fringe, and the whole shape moves like one piece when it’s styled right. Fine to medium texture with medium density is where this lives comfortably, because thicker hair would fight the flip and turn it into something heavier than intended. Oval faces get the most out of this particular framing, though I’ll be honest, I’ve seen wider face shapes pull off similar cuts when the layers start lower.
Vivid copper fades fast. Not “oh it shifted a little” fast, more like you’ll watch it melt into a warm strawberry within three weeks if you’re not on top of glossing appointments. That’s not a maybe, that’s just copper. The blowout dependency is real too, because without a round brush this shape flattens into something that doesn’t resemble the photo at all, and nobody warns you about that part until you’re standing in your bathroom with a paddle brush wondering what happened.


#25 Soft Rooted Silver-Blonde Medium-Length Waves
The root shadow here is doing something really specific that I don’t see people talk about enough, it’s not just dark-to-light, it’s placed to create the illusion of thicker density at the crown where this particular head of hair already has natural lift. That’s a stylist who read the hair before picking up a brush. I noticed it because I spent a whole week last year trying to convince a client that her natural crown volume was an asset, not something to flatten, and she didn’t believe me until I showed her a photo almost identical to this one.
Shoulder-grazing length with long layers that frame the face without disappearing into the rest of the cut. The waves are blown out with a large barrel, not curled, which gives them that rounded, open shape instead of defined spirals. Medium-high density hair that’s naturally wavy, so the movement isn’t manufactured, it’s just encouraged. The grey blending comes from a demi-permanent toner over a subtle root shadow, and honestly the transition is seamless enough that you’d have to look twice to clock any grey at all.
Where it falls short is real. Without a round-brush blowout or a hot tool, this looks like a completely different haircut. Flat, a little shapeless, not bad but not this. If you’re someone who air-dries and walks out the door, this will frustrate you. The toner also needs refreshing every five to six weeks or the warmth starts creeping in at the ends, and once brass shows up on this kind of blonde it moves fast. Oval faces will love how the layers sit, but that’s less about the cut being magic and more about oval faces being easy to work with, which is something stylists know but rarely say out loud.


#26 Warm Mahogany Face-Framing Medium-Length Layers
The mahogany red is what gets you first, and I need to be upfront about it: this shade will betray you within three weeks. It’s one of the fastest fading color families out there, and no amount of cold water rinsing or sulfate-free shampoo will fully save you from that slow slide into muddy copper. A demi-permanent gloss or copper-berry glaze will buy you time, but you’re signing up for maintenance either way.
I had a client years ago who brought in a photo almost identical to this, convinced the color was the whole thing, and completely overlooked the cut underneath it. The cut is actually doing the heavy lifting here. Shoulder-grazing length with long layers that start right at the chin, creating this rounded frame that moves when she moves. There’s a feathered side fringe that falls in a way that feels accidental but absolutely isn’t, whoever cut this was deliberate about where the weight sits and where it doesn’t.
Her hair is fine-to-medium with a light natural wave and medium density, which is the sweet spot for this kind of layering because you get lift and movement without the ends going see-through. On thick hair, these same layers would just puff out sideways. On genuinely fine hair, you’d lose too much of the perimeter. This particular texture lets the feathering do what it’s supposed to do, which is create shape without removing bulk you can’t afford to lose.
If your face is oval, this framing is going to sit well on you because the chin-length layers curve inward right where your face is widest, and the fringe keeps the forehead from feeling exposed. For rounder face shapes, the layers might emphasize width instead of balancing it. Root-softening balayage would help blend regrowth and stretch the time between color appointments, though honestly the red is still going to shift on you no matter what technique you use at the root.
One thing I noticed that most people would miss is how the ends are point-cut rather than blunt, which is why the whole thing looks soft and lived-in instead of styled within an inch of its life. That subtle detail is the difference between a cut that moves like hair and one that moves like a helmet.


#27 Stylish Shoulder-Length Shag with Soft Layers
This shoulder-length shag features soft layers that add movement and dimension, perfect for fine to medium hair types. The layered cut enhances natural texture, making it ideal for those with a round or oval face shape. Styling is simple; a light mousse or texturizing spray can enhance the look without weighing it down. This hairstyle’s versatility allows for both casual and polished looks, making it a fantastic option for effortless elegance.


#28 Wavy Shoulder-Length with Highlights
The wavy shoulder-length style with highlights adds dimension and brightness to your hair. The soft waves and subtle highlights create a dynamic, lively look. The natural grey base with lighter streaks enhances the texture, making this a stylish and fresh choice for those who want a bit of sparkle in their hair.


#29 Straight Blunt Cut
The straight blunt cut is ideal for a sleek, polished look. The blunt ends add structure and volume, making the hair appear thicker. The straight, natural brown color creates a timeless, chic style that is easy to manage and perfect for any occasion. This cut is great for those who prefer a clean, modern look.


#30 Medium Hair with Soft Waves
This medium-length style with soft waves adds a touch of elegance and volume. The waves create a gentle, flowing look, perfect for fine to medium hair types. The natural grey color enhances the soft texture, making it a beautiful choice for those who prefer a graceful, low-maintenance style.


#31 Medium Soft Layers and Curtain Bangs
This medium-length hairstyle features soft layers and curtain bangs, offering a gentle frame for the face. The layers add volume and movement, while the curtain bangs provide a flattering touch. The rich brown color with subtle highlights complements the style beautifully, making it perfect for a sophisticated yet effortless look.


#32 Medium-Length Hair with Side Part
This medium-length style with a side part offers a classic, flattering look. The side part adds volume and frames the face beautifully. The sleek, natural grey hair is easy to manage and looks polished. This style is ideal for those who prefer a timeless, sophisticated appearance.


#33 Bouncy Mid-Length Curls
Embrace your natural curls with this bouncy mid-length style. The curls add volume and texture, making the hair look lively and full. The soft grey color complements the curls, adding depth and dimension. This style is perfect for those with naturally curly hair who want a vibrant and youthful look.


#34 Shoulder-Length Tousled Waves
These shoulder-length tousled waves are great for a relaxed, casual style. The waves add volume and texture, perfect for fine to medium hair. The natural grey color enhances the tousled look, giving it a carefree yet stylish vibe. It’s an excellent choice for those who prefer a low-maintenance yet chic appearance.


#35 Medium-Length Sleek Style with Subtle Layers
This medium-length style with subtle layers is perfect for a sleek, polished look. The layers add a hint of movement and dimension, making the hair appear fuller and more dynamic. The natural grey color shines beautifully, creating a sophisticated yet easy-to-maintain style ideal for everyday elegance.


#36 Soft Curls and Fringe for Shoulder-Length Hair
This shoulder-length cut with soft curls and fringe provides a gentle, flattering frame for the face. The curls add volume and texture, while the fringe softens the look, making it perfect for fine to medium hair types. The natural grey enhances the curls, creating a sophisticated and feminine style.


#37 Medium-Length with Feathered Ends
This medium-length style with feathered ends offers a soft, elegant look. The feathering adds lightness and movement, making the hair appear fuller and more dynamic. The natural grey color blends beautifully, creating a polished yet relaxed style that’s perfect for any occasion.


#38 Textured Shoulder-Length Cut
This textured shoulder-length cut is ideal for adding depth and dimension. The layers create a soft, airy look that’s perfect for fine to medium hair types. The natural grey highlights the texture, giving it a modern and stylish finish. This cut is easy to maintain and perfect for a natural, effortless look.


#39 Voluminous Medium-Length Waves for Fine Hair
These voluminous waves are perfect for fine hair, adding much-needed body and movement. The medium length provides a versatile canvas, and the natural grey shade gives a sophisticated touch. It’s a great style for those who want to add volume and texture without too much effort.


#40 Shaggy Medium-Length Style with Choppy Layers
This shaggy medium-length style with choppy layers is perfect for adding volume and movement to your hair. The layers create a textured, carefree look that works well with natural waves. The soft grey color enhances the playful texture, making it a great option for a relaxed, stylish appearance.


#41 Mid-Length Shag for Women with Glasses
This mid-length shag is fantastic for women who wear glasses. The layered cut adds texture and movement, giving your hair a fuller appearance. The soft waves complement the glasses, creating a balanced look. The natural grey color enhances the overall style, making it a chic yet low-maintenance choice.


#42 Collarbone Wavy Bob
The collarbone-length wavy bob is a versatile and stylish option. The gentle waves add movement and texture, while the length is perfect for those who want a bit more to work with without going too long. The natural grey color enhances the waves, making it a beautiful, low-maintenance style that can be easily dressed up or down.


#43 Straight Medium Bob for Thin Hair
This straight medium bob is a fantastic option for thin hair. The sleek, straight cut adds volume and gives the hair a fuller appearance. The clean lines and natural grey color create a sophisticated look that’s both timeless and easy to maintain. Perfect for a chic, understated style.


#44 Tousled Layered Medium Haircut
This tousled, layered medium haircut adds volume and dimension, perfect for those with fine or thinning hair. The loose waves and layers create a natural, effortless look. The soft grey hue highlights the texture, making it an excellent choice for a carefree, stylish appearance.


#45 Fine Hair Medium Style
This sleek, medium-length style is perfect for fine hair. The straight cut enhances the hair’s natural shine and volume, making it look thicker. The soft, side-swept bangs add a gentle frame to the face. It’s an easy-to-manage look that offers elegance and simplicity, ideal for everyday wear.


#46 Choppy Medium Bob for Round Faces
This choppy medium bob is ideal for round faces. The layers add texture and movement, breaking up the roundness of the face for a more balanced look. The subtle side part and natural grey color create a soft, flattering frame around the face. Perfect for those who want a modern, low-maintenance style that still looks polished.


#47 Graceful Long Gray Waves
This graceful long gray hairstyle features natural waves, perfect for showcasing mature elegance. The length sits beautifully past the shoulders, adding a touch of sophistication. Ideal for those with medium to thick hair density, the waves create volume and movement. This style complements oval and long face shapes, offering a timeless and low-maintenance option for women over 60. The natural gray tones highlight the beauty of aging gracefully, with minimal upkeep required to maintain its charm.


#48 Low-Maintenance Grey Medium Hair
This medium-length hairstyle is perfect for those seeking a low-maintenance option that still looks stylish. The soft, loose curls provide a gentle wave, adding a touch of elegance. The natural grey color requires minimal upkeep, making this style both practical and beautiful. It’s ideal for women who want a chic look without the hassle.


#49 Curly Shoulder-Length Style
Embrace your natural curls with this shoulder-length style. Perfect for showcasing your curls’ natural texture, this cut gives volume and definition. The silver strands blend beautifully with the curls, adding depth and dimension. It’s a great choice for those with naturally curly hair who want a manageable yet stylish look.


#50 Sassy Wavy Medium Hairstyle
This medium-length wavy hairstyle offers a playful yet elegant look. The soft waves add texture and volume, ideal for those with fine or thinning hair. The natural silver hue enhances the waves, providing a vibrant and youthful appearance. It’s a fabulous style for those who enjoy a bit of bounce in their hair without too much fuss.


#51 Shoulder-Length Layers with Middle Part
This shoulder-length cut with layers and a middle part is a great choice for adding volume and movement to your hair. The natural grey color is striking, and the layers help to create a fuller look, which is especially flattering for fine to medium hair types. This style is low-maintenance and can easily be dressed up or down, making it versatile for any occasion.


#52 Medium-Length Bob with Bangs
This medium-length bob with bangs is a perfect choice for women over 70. The shoulder-length cut offers a flattering frame for the face, and the full, straight-across bangs add a youthful touch. The hair’s natural silver hue blends beautifully with any skin tone and minimizes the need for frequent coloring. This style works well with fine to medium hair density, providing a sleek look while maintaining some volume. It’s easy to manage and style, making it a practical yet stylish option.
Enter your email and get this picture and description straight to your inbox, and you'll also get new hair ideas ❤️
🔒 We don't spam or sell emails. See our Privacy Policy.
