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Callaway

Callaway Jaws Full Toe Wedge

Versatile202156°-64°

The Jaws Full Toe is Callaway's answer to a specific problem: the shots you hit with an open face. When you lay the clubface back for a flop or a splash out of a greenside bunker, contact moves up and toward the toe. This wedge puts extra material exactly there. The result is a taller face with grooves that cover almost every inch of it, so the ball still grabs when you catch it high.

Callaway offered it in 56, 58, 60, and 64 degrees, which tells you the intended job. These are your scoring wedges, the ones you reach for inside 100 yards and around the green. The 64 in particular is a specialty club, a steep-faced lob wedge for players who want to hit it high and stop it fast. All four are forged, which gives the face a softer feel at impact than a cast wedge.

One detail sets this wedge apart from a lot of its rivals. The face is left raw and unplated, so it rusts over time. That is on purpose. The rust adds friction, and Callaway's testing showed spin actually climbs as the face wears in. If you like a wedge that looks a little weathered and bites hard on partial shots, this one delivers both.

Callaway Jaws Full Toe Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Versatile
Loft range
56 to 64 degrees
Loft/grind options
4
Model year
2021

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
56°12°WChrome
58°12°WChrome
60°10°WChrome
64°8°WChrome

Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.

Technology

ForgedHigh Launch

About the Callaway Jaws Full Toe

The name describes the head shape. Callaway added mass high on the toe to create a full, rounded profile instead of the teardrop most wedges use. That raises the center of gravity, which is what pushes launch higher, and it lets the grooves run all the way up the toe where open-face contact happens. The Jaws grooves themselves are aggressively cut, with a sharper edge than the standard grooves on Callaway's game-improvement irons, and a groove-in-groove pattern between them for extra bite on chips and pitches. The raw carbon steel face is the piece people notice. It ships bright and rusts as you play it, and Callaway tuned the design around that oxidation rather than fighting it. Behind the face, tungsten weighting helps hold the sole and toe mass where they belong so the club stays stable through soft turf and sand.

Who Should Play the Callaway Jaws Full Toe?

  • You play a lot of creative shots around the green and open the face often, where the full-toe grooves earn their keep.
  • You want maximum spin on partial wedge shots and do not mind a face that rusts and shows wear.
  • You need a true high-lofted lob wedge, since the 60 and 64 options launch steep and land soft.
  • You prefer a softer, forged feel at impact over the firmer sensation of a cast wedge.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does the Jaws Full Toe face rust?

The face is raw carbon steel with no plating, so it oxidizes once you start playing it. Callaway designed it this way because the rust increases friction between the face and ball, and their testing showed spin goes up as the face wears in. It is a cosmetic change you should expect, not a defect.

What is the point of the full-toe shape?

When you open the clubface for a flop or bunker shot, the ball contacts higher and closer to the toe than it does on a square-face shot. The extra material there gives you full grooves at that spot and raises the center of gravity, which helps the ball launch higher off an open face.

Which loft should I get?

It comes in 56, 58, 60, and 64 degrees. A 56 works as a sand and gap wedge, 58 and 60 are the common lob wedge choices for most players, and the 64 is a specialty club for very high, soft-landing shots that takes practice to use well. Match the gap to whatever pitching and gap wedge you already carry.

Is the Jaws Full Toe good for full shots too?

It handles full swings fine, but the design leans toward greenside and partial-wedge work. The high toe weighting and full-face grooves are built for spin and open-face versatility rather than distance control on stock full swings, so it shines most inside 100 yards and around the green.

How is it different from Callaway's Jaws MD5 wedge?

The MD5 is a more traditional teardrop-shaped wedge aimed at a wider range of players and shots. The Full Toe has the raised toe profile, full-face grooves, and raw rusting face, all geared toward players who open the face and want extra spin on touch shots. If you play a lot of creative shots, the Full Toe is the more specialized pick.

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