HairArchitect · Blog

Inside HairArchitect AI: From Facial Analysis to a Shareable Plan

A plain-language tour of the HairArchitect workflow—Golden Ratio insights, strand simulation, graft estimates—and how clinics can use it in the consultation room.

Published · Updated

Written by HairArchitect Editorial Team · Planning & education content

Medically reviewed by Dr. Erkam CAYMAZ · Hair restoration surgeon

TL;DR

HairArchitect AI workflow: capture photo → map facial proportions → design hairline → preview density → estimate grafts → share plan with your clinic. Each step is editable; nothing is final until your surgeon approves.

HairArchitect AI is built for one uncomfortable truth: hair restoration decisions are visual, emotional, and technical all at once. The app bundles computer-vision analysis, dense hair rendering, and planning tools so patients and surgeons can iterate on the same screen.

Step 1: Facial landmarks and proportion context

The system highlights symmetry and proportion cues that surgeons already think about—expressed in a way patients can follow. This is educational context, not an automated diagnosis.

Step 2: Simulation that respects density

High strand counts aim for realism during design—not a promise that every transplanted follicle will match a render pixel-for-pixel. Use simulation to discuss shape, coverage, and “too conservative vs too aggressive” scenarios.

Step 3: Graft math as a conversation anchor

When estimates update as you redraw zones, the discussion becomes tangible. Bring screenshots or exports to your clinic visit so your surgeon can confirm, adjust, or explain limitations with specifics.

Who it is for

Patients researching options, coordinators explaining workflows, and surgeons who want a standardized visualization layer—all benefit when expectations are aligned early. The App Store listing is the best place to check current availability and device requirements.

Digital planning and visualization support the consult conversation; surgical extraction and implantation remain medical procedures performed by qualified professionals. (ISHRS — Hair Transplant Guide for Patients)
While digital planning tools help set expectations, surgical extraction and implantation must be performed by qualified medical professionals. (ISHRS — Hair Transplant Guide for Patients)

Do I need an internet connection for every step?

Core design and on-device preview work locally on supported iPhones. Optional cloud features may need network access.

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