Good point! The system originally was for men, Kibbe only expanded later. For men the height limits are different because their overall altitude is. It's all moved up higher significantly. Like for South East Asian people, all the limits have to be lowered because they aren't as tall on average, same principle. For you it's completely possible to be TR at 5'11, especially because it's a subcategory. "Theatrical" gives a lot of Dramatic height after all, elongating the Romantic lines.
What I consider when typing is what is the person's base type out of the five main ones is. The subcategory is just an addition. Looking at you it's prominent that you have more of Romantic's luscious curve than Dramatic's edges and thinness in a first impression. The second impression is that you're somewhat rectangular, that's where Theatrical as the addition comes in.
Rob Lowe is a Theatrical Romantic, he has an uncanny resemblance to the general softness of your face look at that, with some slight sharpness added in the brows, chin, lip:
And: Rob is 5'11. Boom. You better go out there and snatch some wigs, Lowe Junior.
Just to make sure: The other type I consider for you is Soft Dramatic if the 5'11 really trumps everything else.
It's just swapped around here. I.e., first impression of you is the height, second is the roundedness of features. You can go by what people typically notice you as. Wow, he's a lanky tower and striking (Dramatic main type)! Or, wow, he's really sultry and sexy (Romantic main type). People usually pick up the Kibbe type in their own words, it really helps.
If you want to go the extra mile just try out the respective clothes, that'll be fun. Theatrical Romantic has much more ornament: ruffles, dots, any small rounded detail. It would ridiculous on any other type, but Theatrical Romantic pulls it off. I call it the Romeo style. Soft Dramatic is extra bold and has less delicacy, much more asymmetry - always good with drapes and cowls at the chest area. That would be the greek god style.
Adam Driver is a Soft Dramatic. It really comes out how much more sharp edges he has, unlike with Rob Lowe you instantly notice: damn! He's huge! The nose, the brows, it all screams strict geometry. With Rob the first impression is how voluptuous the lines are. He's a heartthrob. Soft Dramatic has a majestic T silhouette, and highly irregular features instead, creating the impression of regalness:
He carries the draping at the neck soooo well. Soft Dramatic can don the supervillan chic, always. Of course he blew up in TFA and people praised him for his looks, the movie stylist did everything right.
Theatrical Romantic - and you can try this out and instantly see how it overpowers or underwhelms you or not - looks best with small-scale patterns and curves. Even just a rounded neckline works wonders with Rob, has a good fit in general:
And here, he even makes cringe fashion and an odd color work - note how we still keep the Theatrical element with the suit's sharp edges. Just the shirt below (that's Dramatic Classic type) doesn't blend in:
Gorgeous. He still looks like he can raise hell. Give Adam something small/rounded and it's completely at odds. It doesn't do him justice. He's diminished by the small curved lines while his body is extremely striking and begs to slice haters in half with all that sharpness:
Rob makes even the weirdest, tiny retro knit look charismatic, it looks harmonious:
That way, you can experiment. Maybe you already know what type of clothing works best, that'll settle it already
Look for pieces that were complimented by others, either the color is best with your complexion or the Kibbe lines are on point. Much love, and thanks for bearing with me there