The blowout low taper fade curly hair is the perfect mix of volume, shape, and fine points. This cut allows the curls living on the top, and simultaneously the sides of your head are not very long, clean and held with a slight low taper fade. A blowout is the process of tallness and texture addition, the goal is to have a natural curl style that looks fuller and more defined while keeping it soft. A lot of boys have this cut as their favorite because they can have the feeling of out of the hair shop and a natural finish. This style works well with a loose or curly wave, and at the same time, this maintenance allows for a look that is neat at the ends.


Blowout ≠ Straightening
If you’re imagining straight hair, you’re way off. This blowout isn’t about flat-ironing anything. It’s more like… stretching the curls a bit. Gives them some extra length and bounce without losing the curl pattern. The shrinkage battle is real, and this helps show the actual length you’ve got. My hair didn’t turn straight, it just loosened up a little. Kinda like when you let curls air dry stretched, but more intentional.
Want something a little bolder around the ears? The burst fade curves perfectly with curls and adds that extra edge to your look.

The Taper Part Is Low-Key Important
The fade here stays low—real low. If you’re expecting one of those dramatic high fades, this ain’t it. It blends out right above the neckline and behind the ears. You keep most of your length up top, which is the point. But that clean edge around the neck and sides? That’s what makes people notice the difference. It’s subtle, but it levels up the whole thing.

Products For Blowout Low Taper Fade Curly Hair
Look, you can’t just hit your hair with a blow dryer and walk out the door. That’s a recipe for crispy ends and regret. You need a solid heat protectant, some leave-in or light curl cream, and maybe something to hold shape. I personally skip gel—don’t like the crunch. But if your curls are extra frizzy, it can help. Also, pick or comb? Totally your call. I just used my fingers and fluffed a little.


Real Talk: Maintenance Isn’t a Joke
Two days later I realized the truth—this cut looks fresh, but it takes effort. I had to touch it up every morning. The fade area stayed neat for maybe 10 days before it started looking fuzzy. Also, sleeping on blown-out curls is a whole challenge. Even with a bonnet, they kinda flatten or curl in weird directions. I tried pineapple-ing it at night and yeah, that helped a bit. Still needed water and reshaping in the morning.
Into length and texture? The modern mullet fade takes your curls to the next level with flow in the back and taper in the front.

FAQs
How long does a blowout low taper fade last before it needs a touch-up?
Honestly? You get like 10 days of it looking crisp, max. After that, the fade starts softening and the curls start doing their own thing.
Do I have to keep blowing it out every time I style it?
Not really. If you keep it wrapped or protected, the blowout can last. But humidity or sweat will ruin the stretch real quick.
Can I do this style myself at home?
Technically, yes. But that fade line is tough to nail without help. If you’ve got a friend who cuts hair, maybe.
What curl types does this cut work on best?
I’d say anywhere from 3A to 4B can rock it. The blowout helps bring out definition even on tighter curls.
Is this damaging for curls in the long run?
As long as you use heat protectant and don’t blow out every week, it’s fine. Just don’t fry it on high heat.
