The Men's Textured Crop: What It Is and How to Cut It
The Men's Textured Crop: What It Is and How to Cut It
The textured crop has been one of the most consistent entries on barbershop service menus for the past several years. Its appeal is straightforward: it is short and low-maintenance, works on multiple hair types, and requires almost no daily styling effort while still looking intentional and current.
The defining characteristics: short faded or tapered sides, and a top section cut short with texture (usually point-cut or razor-cut ends) that falls forward toward the forehead rather than being swept back or to the side.
Variations of the Textured Crop
The textured crop comes in several versions that share the same core structure:
- Classic textured crop: Mid to high fade on the sides. Top section cut to 1 to 2 inches with point-cut or razor-cut ends, styled forward with a flat matt finish. Clean, modern, minimal.
- Disconnected textured crop: High fade or skin fade on the sides with a sharp visual disconnect between the very short sides and the longer, textured top. The contrast is the style.
- French crop (traditional version): Lower taper rather than fade. Top section cut forward with a slight fringe. Less dramatic than the high-fade version. Common in European and UK barbershop markets.
- Textured crop with skin fade: Bald fade on the sides and back. Textured top with fringe. The most modern and graphic version of the style.
Cutting the Sides
The sides use standard taper or fade technique with the height determined by the version requested. A mid fade (fade line at the temple) is the most common base for a textured crop. A high skin fade produces the more dramatic disconnect version.
Establish the fade height, work through the guard progression, blend the transitions. The side work for a textured crop is completed first, before addressing the top.
Cutting the Top
The top section of a textured crop is typically cut to 1 to 2.5 inches. The cutting direction on the top follows the growth direction of the hair — forward, toward the face — since this is the direction the style falls in.
Use point cutting (angling the scissors and cutting into the tips of the hair sections rather than across them) on the top to add texture and remove the blunt edge. Point cutting creates disconnection within the hair section so that when it is styled, individual strands fall at slightly different lengths, producing the textured, piece-y appearance that defines the style.
Alternatively, razor cutting the top section with a texturizing razor creates a similar or more extreme version of the textured finish. Razor work on the top is particularly effective on medium-thick hair; on fine hair, it can create too much thinning.
Keep the front section (the fringe) slightly longer than the back of the top. The fringe is the visual anchor of the crop — it falls forward over the forehead and is the detail clients reference when describing the style.
Styling the Textured Crop
The textured crop requires minimal product and styling:
- A matte clay or paste worked through dry or slightly damp hair with the fingers, pushing the top forward toward the forehead
- No blow-drying required for most clients
- The fringe should fall naturally forward — no backcombing or sculpting needed
The low styling requirement is one of the crop's primary selling points. Clients who do not want to spend time in front of a mirror each morning choose this style partly because it takes 30 seconds to style.
Face Shapes and the Textured Crop
The textured crop suits oval, square, and rectangular face shapes well. The forward-falling fringe shortens the visual face length, which makes it less ideal on already-short face shapes (round faces where the crop's horizontal fringe line can appear to widen rather than elongate). For round face shapes, a version with more height at the crown and a shorter fringe gives better proportion.
CADMEN Training
Textured cuts, point cutting technique, and the full men's haircut range are covered in the CADMEN hands-on program. academy.cadmen.ca/in-person-training.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a textured crop haircut?
A textured crop is a short men's haircut with faded or tapered sides and a short top section cut with point cutting or razor cutting to create texture and disconnection in the hair ends. The top falls forward toward the forehead rather than being swept back. The defining visual is the textured, piece-y appearance of the top combined with the clean, short sides. It is one of the most consistently popular modern barbershop styles and suits a wide range of hair types and face shapes.
How short is the top on a textured crop?
The top section on a standard textured crop is typically 1 to 2.5 inches. The fringe (the front section that falls toward the forehead) is slightly longer than the rest of the top — often 1.5 to 2.5 inches — while the crown may be cut to 1 to 1.5 inches. Shorter tops (under 1 inch) lack enough length to create visible texture and movement. Longer tops (2.5 to 3+ inches) move the style toward a longer textured cut rather than a crop. The "crop" in the name refers to the overall shortness — it is a short-to-medium style.
How do you style a textured crop at home?
Apply a small amount of matte clay or paste to dry or slightly damp hair. Work it through with the fingertips, pushing the top section forward toward the forehead. The fringe falls naturally into place. No comb is needed. No blow-drying is needed for most hair types. The textured crop is specifically designed for minimal home styling — the texture and forward fall are cut into the hair at the barbershop and require only a small amount of product to activate at home. Total styling time: 30 to 60 seconds for most clients.
What hair type is the textured crop best for?
The textured crop works well on straight, wavy, and slightly curly hair. On straight or wavy hair, the point-cut ends create clean texture and the fringe falls consistently forward. On slightly curly hair (type 2a to 2c), the natural wave adds extra texture without any product, and the crop works well because the shorter length controls the curl without fighting it. On very curly or coarse hair (3a and above), the crop can still work but the fringe may not fall as consistently forward due to the curl pattern pushing the hair in multiple directions. For very tight curl types, a version with more length at the top to allow the curl to fall is a better adaptation of the crop concept.
How long does a textured crop last before it needs a trim?
3 to 5 weeks for most clients. The sides (faded or tapered) show growth first and typically need maintenance every 3 to 4 weeks to stay clean. The top section can go slightly longer without looking overgrown because the textured style ages reasonably well as the fringe grows out. Clients who want the sides and top to always look fresh come in every 3 weeks. Clients who prioritize the side fade maintenance come in on that schedule and address the top when it gets too long. The textured crop is among the lower-maintenance fade styles in terms of how long it looks good between professional visits.