The Grain Map — How to Find Your Face’s Hair Direction | SmartShave
Technique & Fundamentals

The Grain Map: How to Find Your Face’s Hair Direction

Understanding your grain is the single biggest improvement most men can make to their shave quality — and almost nobody does it. Here’s the five-minute method that changes everything.

SmartShave Editorial·6 min read·Technique
🔥
Razor burn nobody explains
Most razor burn is caused by shaving against the grain without adequate preparation
🌀
Grain changes zone by zone
Your cheek, chin, jaw and neck may all grow in different directions
🪒
Ingrown hairs explained
ATG passes without prep are the primary cause of ingrown hairs on the neck
📍
The neck is the hardest zone
Grain can change direction two or three times across a single man’s neck

Ask any experienced wet shaver what the most common beginner mistake is, and they’ll give you the same answer: ignoring the grain. Every man’s beard grows in a unique pattern — a combination of directions that varies across different zones of the face. Shave with the grain and you get a comfortable, low-irritation pass. Shave against it without preparation and you’re inviting ingrown hairs, razor burn, and weeks of inflamed skin.

Mapping your grain is a simple process that takes five minutes and pays dividends for every shave that follows. Here is exactly how to do it, what to do with the information, and how to apply it to produce a noticeably better result from your next shave onward.

What Is ‘The Grain’?

The grain refers to the direction in which your facial hair naturally grows. It is not uniform across your face. A man’s grain on his upper lip may grow downward, while on his neck it might grow upward, sideways, or in two different directions simultaneously. The jaw, cheeks, and chin each follow their own pattern — and that pattern can vary left to right on the same face.

There are three fundamental shaving directions relative to your grain. Shaving with the grain (WTG) means your blade moves in the same direction as hair growth — the most comfortable and least aggressive approach. Across the grain (XTG) means moving perpendicular to the grain — moderately close and reasonably comfortable. Against the grain (ATG) means working directly opposite to growth — the closest possible shave but the highest risk of irritation on unprepared skin.

The Touch Test
Run your fingertips across 48-hour stubble in different directions. When you move with the grain the skin feels smooth. When you move against it you feel clear resistance — like stroking velvet the wrong way. That resistance tells you exactly where the grain is pointing.

The Five Face Zones and What to Expect

🫦Upper Lip

Typically grows downward on both sides, angling slightly toward the centre philtrum. One of the more predictable zones — most men find a consistent downward direction here with minimal lateral variation. Shave downward with short strokes for the with-the-grain pass.

😤Cheeks

Generally grows downward and slightly forward, but significant variation occurs near the lower jaw. The upper cheek is usually predictable. The lower cheek near the jawline is where the grain begins to shift — pay close attention here when mapping, as this transition zone is a common source of irritation.

🧔Chin

One of the most variable zones on any man’s face. Chin growth can move downward, forward, upward toward the lower lip, or outward toward the jaw — sometimes multiple directions on the same chin. Map this zone carefully with the touch test and don’t assume it matches your cheeks.

↔️Jaw and Neck

The most complex region on any man’s face. Grain on the neck frequently changes direction multiple times — growing upward in some sections, sideways in others, and occasionally in opposing directions left to right on the same man. This zone is responsible for the majority of shaving irritation, ingrown hairs, and razor burn. Map it carefully and never assume.

How to Map Your Grain — Step by Step

1
Let stubble grow for 24–48 hours

You need enough growth to feel clearly with your fingertips. Freshly shaved skin gives you nothing to work with. Two days of stubble is ideal — long enough to feel, short enough that the direction is still clear before the hair begins to curl or lie flat.

2
Find good lighting — natural is best

Stand near a window or use a well-lit bathroom. You’re looking for the way light catches the stubble surface to reveal direction, as well as relying on touch. Natural raking light from the side shows grain direction more clearly than flat overhead illumination.

3
Run your fingertips slowly across each zone

Work zone by zone: cheeks, upper lip, chin, jaw, left neck, right neck. In each area, stroke slowly in multiple directions until you find the direction of least resistance — that is with the grain. The direction of maximum resistance is against the grain. Note both for each zone.

4
Sketch your personal grain map

Draw a simple front and side outline of your face and use arrows to mark grain direction in each zone. It takes three minutes and becomes an invaluable reference, especially when trying new techniques. Photograph it and save it to your phone. Refer to it whenever you change your shaving routine.

5
Check again after your first post-map shave

Your initial map is accurate for most zones, but a shave that follows your map precisely will sometimes reveal a zone where something still pulled or irritated. That zone needs a closer look — the grain may shift at a point you mapped broadly. Refine the map over two or three shaves until it’s precise.

How to Use Your Grain Map: The Three-Pass System

PassDirectionClosenessComfortBest For
First PassWith the grain (WTG)75% of final shaveVery ComfortableAll skin types, every shave
Second PassAcross the grain (XTG)90% of final shaveComfortableMen wanting a closer result
Third PassAgainst the grain (ATG)100% — baby smoothAggressiveRobust skin only, specific zones

The three-pass system works best when each pass is preceded by re-application of shaving cream and uses a clean, sharp blade. Never attempt a second or third pass on a dry face or with a blade that has already done significant work. The grain map tells you the direction — the prep determines whether the result is excellent or painful.

For most men, a WTG first pass and XTG second pass is the optimal balance of closeness and comfort. Reserve ATG passes for isolated zones — typically the upper lip or a specific area of the chin — where maximum closeness is desired and your skin has demonstrated it can handle the additional stress without reaction.