The 13 Kibbe Body Types
Start here · The 13 types
An Image Identity is a way of reading your own bone structure, flesh, and features as one coherent line instead of a list of separate “problem areas.” Once you know where you sit on the scale from sharp and angular to soft and curved, every clothing, hair, and makeup choice gets a lot simpler — you’re no longer guessing, you’re matching. Thirteen types cover the whole range, grouped here into five families by their root theme.
Skip the reading — get your answer. Take the quiz — 16 questions, real scoring, no email wall.
Dramatics
DramaticLong, straight, and unmistakably sharp-boned — command is the whole point.
Soft DramaticThe same bold scale, but fleshed out with a lush, sensual undercurrent.
Naturals
NaturalEasy, athletic, and blunt-edged rather than sharp — nothing here is fussy.
Flamboyant NaturalBigger scale, broader bones, and a bolder version of the same relaxed strength.
Soft NaturalBlunt bone structure carrying a gentler, fleshier body underneath.
Classics
ClassicEven, symmetrical, and quietly polished — nothing pulls focus from the whole.
Dramatic ClassicThat same balance with a squarer, more angular edge running through it.
Soft ClassicSymmetrical bones softened by a rounder, gently curved body.
Gamines
GaminePetite and sharp at once — a built-in contradiction that reads as pure spark.
Flamboyant GamineSmall-scaled but broad-boned, with an extra dose of bold energy.
Soft GamineThe same petite contradiction, tipped toward curve and softness.
Romantics
RomanticSoft, curved, and unapologetically lush from head to toe.
Theatrical RomanticThe same curved hourglass with a sharper, more glamorous edge underneath.
Not sure which you are?
Reading descriptions only gets you so far — most people land close to two or three types before the scoring sorts it out. If you want to understand how the whole system actually works before you commit fifteen minutes to it, read how the quiz works. And if you’re stuck between two specific types, the comparison hub lines up the eight pairs people mix up most often side by side.
Unofficial guide inspired by the Image Identity system in David Kibbe’s Metamorphosis (1987). Body types describe line, not worth — every type is the goal, not a consolation prize.