Information about Hair try-on - hair styling
App Feature
An AI-powered virtual hairstyle try-on and hair color changer. It uses face recognition to fit preloaded hairstyles (short/long/curly; men/women) onto your photo, lets you adjust size/angle, and experiment with color overlays before saving or sharing.
Verdict
Verdict: A broad but basic hairstyle try-on that works for quick fun, but falls short on realistic color and polish.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Casual experimentation with different cuts and lengths
- Quick social previews to discuss ideas with a stylist
Not ideal for:
- Users needing accurate hair color simulation (e.g., dark-to-blonde)
- Those expecting premium-grade realism and stable performance
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Lots of style choices, simple adjustment (resize/angle), and minimal intrusiveness for some users; easy save/share flow.
Users complain about:
Color editing behaves like a basic overlay, so dark styles remain dark and don’t match swatches well; low overall rating suggests wider issues with quality or reliability.
Is it Worth Paying For?
The app is free with ads and optional IAP. Given the low rating and noted color limitations, try the free features first; only consider purchases if the style-fitting meets your needs despite color realism constraints.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared to leaders like L’Oréal Style My Hair, YouCam Makeup/Perfect Corp, or FaceApp’s hair filters, this app offers a large library and simple controls but lags in color accuracy and realism. Competitors typically provide better segmentation, truer color rendering, and more refined UX—often behind subscriptions or stronger paywalls.
Summary
Hair App–AI Hairstyle Try On delivers an easy, library-driven way to preview cuts and adjust them to your face with basic AI placement. It’s useful for brainstorming styles and sharing ideas with a stylist, but its color tool acts more like an overlay than true recoloring, making major shade changes (especially from dark to blonde) unreliable. The very low average rating hints at broader rough edges. Try it for quick inspiration and fit testing, but for realistic color simulation and polished results, you may prefer better-rated alternatives—even if they cost more.



