2026-07-14
Will I look prettier if I get my eyes and nose done together? | Honest Review of Simultaneous Plastic Surgery
Discover how combining eye and nose surgery can create a more balanced and harmonious facial appearance, addressing overall facial structure rather than isolated features.


When you look at the eyes and nose separately, you might miss important details.
During consultations,
many people often express concerns about specific areas, such as, ‘My eyes feel a bit lacking,’ or ‘I want to make my nose a little higher.’
However, what truly determines one's facial impression is not each individual feature, but the overall balance of the entire structure.
This case also clearly showed a difference in results when approaching it as a single area versus considering the whole face together.
Why the impression seemed blurry

This patient's eyes were not particularly small, nor was their nose very low.
However, when viewed from the front, the eyes lacked presence, making the overall impression unclear.
Similarly, the issue with the nose was not its height,
but rather a lack of three-dimensional volume that forms the center from the front, making the face appear spread out.
As such, even if there are no major problems with individual features,
if their roles don't align, the overall impression can appear blurry.
What was important in this case was ‘connection,’ not ‘order’

During the consultation, rather than discussing how to improve the eyes and nose individually,
we first explained the proportion of the eyes in the overall impression, why the nose wasn't playing a central role,
and the changes in impression that occur when both elements are simultaneously weak.
This patient had an unclear eye line,
and their nose also failed to provide a central focus,
resulting in a facial structure where the gaze wasn't drawn to the center from the front, and the impression appeared dispersed.
Therefore, instead of simply dividing the process into separate steps,
we approached it by designing both together from the start.
Eyes create ‘clarity,’ nose creates ‘center’


The design criteria are clear.
For the eyes, rather than over-emphasizing them,
we establish a line that can make the impression clearer within the current structure.
For the nose, instead of just increasing its height,
we focus on enhancing its three-dimensional volume to create a central focus even from the front.
Since both of these must align simultaneously for the overall impression to be refined,
we do not view them separately,
but proceed by balancing them within an interconnected structure.
The difference in change when designed together

The post-surgery change is not a dramatic transformation,
but rather a clarification of a previously blurry impression, the formation of a central focus from the front,
and the creation of a naturally flowing three-dimensional volume from the side.
Such results are possible because the design was based on the entire facial structure.
The most important criterion in consultation is not the magnitude of change,
but how naturally it harmonizes.
This case also exemplifies a situation where only the necessary parts were precisely adjusted,
resulting in a naturally refined overall impression.
What's important is ‘how,’ not ‘how much’

Considering the eyes and nose together does not mean performing two surgeries simultaneously,
but rather viewing the entire face as a single structure
and establishing the direction for refinement.
The clearer this process is,
the more complete and natural the results will be, without being excessive.
If, like in this case, there are no major flaws but the impression remains unrefined,
approaching it based on the overall structure rather than a single area
can lead to more natural and stable results.
Conclusion

When I see people with similar concerns,
most often stop at ‘where to get it done.’
However, what is truly important
is not dividing the areas,
but judging what direction is right for refinement in the current state.
Once this criterion is established,
the decision-making process often becomes much simpler
than worrying about the surgery itself.


