
Pretty Scale
Upload a photo. Get a face score, symmetry breakdown, and practical looks tips.
Most “beauty advice” is guesswork wrapped in filters. Pretty Scale turns a single photo into a structured face report: a beauty score, face shape read, symmetry checks, and golden-ratio signals. It helps you see what’s working, what’s throwing things off, and what to tweak before you waste money on the wrong haircut, makeup, or angles.
Beauty “feedback” is usually a lie. This one shows receipts.
Pretty Scale (prettyscale.info) sits in a weird middle ground: not therapy, not a beauty guru, not a glam filter. It’s a blunt mirror with numbers.
You upload a photo. It runs an AI-based facial analysis and returns a report built for action, not vibes.
What it actually gives you
This isn’t just a single score that leaves you spiraling.
Pretty Scale breaks your face down into a few useful chunks:
A clear beauty score
A top-line rating gives you a baseline. Use it to compare different photos (lighting, angles, grooming), not to define your worth.
Face shape analysis
Most people guess their face shape and then copy the wrong “best haircut for X” post. The tool calls the shape and helps you stop picking styles that fight your structure.
Golden ratio + symmetry cues
Here’s the deal: symmetry and proportion drive first impressions. Pretty Scale flags proportion signals tied to the golden ratio and points out where balance drifts.
Personalized tips
The site doesn’t pretend you can “fix” a face overnight. It pushes small, sane moves - presentation, grooming, framing, and photo choices - that change how you read on camera.
Why founders, creators, and job hunters care
Your face is part of your funnel.
If you ship content, sell on calls, or show up on LinkedIn, you already get judged. Pretty Scale gives you a fast loop to test changes: new haircut, beard, brows, glasses, lighting, camera height.
It gets worse: you can’t “logic” your way out of a bad first photo. So measure it. Then iterate.
Who should skip it
If you want validation, don’t use this.
If you want feedback you can act on, prettyscale.info gives you a simple report you can run again and again until your photos stop bleeding clicks.
