
Lips
The lips are a central feature of the face and play an important role in facial balance. Lip filler can enhance shape, symmetry, and proportion while ensuring the lips complement surrounding features such as the chin, nose, and jawline. The goal is not always to create larger lips, but to create harmony within the face.

Nose
The nose is the centerpiece of the face and plays a major role in facial balance. Subtle enhancements through Non Surgical Rhinoplasty can improve symmetry, refine contours, and create a more balanced profile without surgery.

Temples
Volume loss in the temples can create an unbalanced appearance and contribute to facial aging. Restoring volume in this area helps create a smoother facial contour and improves the transition between the forehead, cheeks, and jawline for a more harmonious overall appearance.

Chin & Jaw
The chin and jawline create the framework of the face. Enhancing these areas can improve definition, strengthen the profile, and create better balance between the upper and lower face for a more harmonious appearance.

Nasolabial Folds
Nasolabial folds, or smile lines, can become more noticeable with age and volume loss. Facial balancing often restores support to the midface and cheeks, helping soften these lines while maintaining natural facial harmony.

Cheeks
The cheeks provide support to the midface and influence how light reflects across the face. Strategic cheek enhancement can restore structure, improve facial proportions, and create better balance between the upper and lower face while maintaining a natural appearance.
what is facial balancing?
- The Profile Line: Aligning the projection of the nose, lips, and chin so they sit in a balanced ratio.
- Chin and Jawline: Elongating or widening a recessed chin to make the nose appear smaller and define the neck.
- Cheek and Temple Support: Restoring mid-face volume to lift sagging lower-face skin and balance a strong jaw
- Hyaluronic Acid Fillers (e.g., Juvéderm, Restylane) for instant structural shaping in the chin, jaw, or lips.
- Biostimulators (e.g., Sculptra, Radiesse) to build broad, natural volume in hollow cheeks or temples over time.
- Neuromodulators (e.g., Botox, Dysport) to slim a wide jawline (masseter Botox) or lift a downturned smile
- Instant changes: You will see immediate structural shifts from traditional dermal fillers (like a sharper chin or jawline).
- Final settling: Swelling usually resolves within 1 to 2 weeks, which is when the immediate fillers look best.
- Gradual improvements: If your plan includes biostimulators like Sculptra, your results will continue to improve and peak around 4 to 6 months
Results generally last anywhere from 9 to 24 months. The longevity depends entirely on the specific products your provider selects. Harder structural fillers placed on the chin and jawline tend to last longer (12–24 months), while softer fillers placed in highly mobile areas like the lips break down faster (6–12 months).
Standard filler treatments are problem-centric (e.g., "I have under-eye bags, please fill them"). Facial balancing is proportion-centric (e.g., "My under-eye bags look prominent because my cheek structure is receding; let's support the cheek to fix the shadow"). It prevents the overfilled, unnatural look by distributing small amounts of product across multiple areas to keep everything in sync
The risks match those of standard injections, including temporary bruising, swelling, asymmetry, and tenderness. The most serious (but rare) risk is an accidental vascular occlusion (filler blocking a blood vessel), which is why choosing a highly skilled injector with a deep understanding of facial anatomy is critical
Only when booked with Laura, NP
