Your muscles can reveal your personality. đź‘€
Over the years, your facial muscles adapt to the expressions you make most.
Some people develop:
• stronger frown patterns
• dominant smile muscles
• elevated brows
• or overactive lower-face muscles
These repeated movements create unique facial patterns that can make someone appear:
• softer
• stronger
• friendlier
• more serious
• or more expressive
This is why no two faces age the same way.
The muscles you use most become part of your facial identity.
As injectors, understanding muscle behaviour helps us understand not just how a face moves—but how that person communicates with the world.
The face tells a story.
The muscles tell you how it was written.
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Natalie Page Aesthetics
𝑨𝒆𝒔𝒕𝒉𝒆𝒕𝒊𝒄𝒔𝑨𝒄𝒂𝒅𝒆𝒎𝒚
Team:L5Trainer+NursePrescriber+Surgeon.
10 Years🔝Southampton UK. IG Subscription£19.99👑 Pharma @nataliepagepharma
How to map a full-face Sculptra treatment ✨
A successful full-face Sculptra treatment starts long before the first injection.
It starts with assessment and mapping.
When planning a full-face biostimulatory treatment, we evaluate:
• facial proportions
• areas of volume loss
• skin quality
• structural support
• and overall facial harmony
Rather than focusing on a single concern, we map the face as a whole to identify where collagen stimulation will create the most balanced and natural outcome.
Key treatment zones may include:
• temples
• cheeks
• preauricular area
• jawline
• chin
• and other areas depending on individual anatomy
The goal isn’t to add obvious volume.
It’s to strategically stimulate collagen production and restore support over time.
A thorough facial map helps create a personalised treatment plan that respects anatomy, maintains balance, and delivers natural-looking rejuvenation.
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Face ratio restoration ✨
One of the biggest misconceptions in aesthetics is that full-face restoration only requires a few millilitres of filler.
The reality?
As we age, we lose support from:
• bone remodelling
• fat pad deflation
• ligament laxity
• and soft tissue descent
When you’re restoring facial ratios properly, you’re not treating one area.
You’re rebuilding an entire structure.
This is why true facial restoration can require significantly more product than patients expect.
Not because we’re creating volume.
But because we’re replacing lost support across multiple anatomical units.
The goal isn’t a bigger face.
It’s restoring:
• proportions
• balance
• projection
• and facial harmony
A natural result is often the outcome of restoring far more structure than people realise.
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or comment SUBSCRIPTION for full facial restoration and ratio assessment lessons online
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How to shorten the philtrum đź‘„
A long philtrum can make the lips appear:
• thinner
• flatter
• and less youthful
The mistake is thinking the answer is simply adding more volume.
True philtrum shortening is about creating the illusion of a shorter distance between the nose and the upper lip through:
• upper lip support
• controlled vermilion show
• lip eversion
• and strategic shaping
Because in many cases, it’s not the philtrum itself that needs changing.
It’s the way the upper lip is supported.
The goal is to create:
• better lip-to-philtrum proportions
• a more youthful appearance
• and improved facial harmony
Without looking overfilled.
Sometimes a small change in shape can completely transform the profile.
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Every injector looks at a face differently. đź‘€
Some see lines.
Some see volume loss.
Some see anatomy.
Some see movement.
And some see the entire face as a connected structure.
The difference in results often isn’t the product being used.
It’s the way the injector thinks.
When you understand:
• proportions
• ageing patterns
• facial vectors
• tissue behaviour
• and structural support
Your treatment plan changes completely.
The needle stays the same.
The mindset doesn’t.
So the question is:
When you look at a face, what do you actually see?
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13/06/2026
M-shape âžť Sweetheart lips đź‘„
One of the hardest lip transformations is turning an M-shaped lip into a sweetheart shape.
Why?
Because you’re not just adding volume.
You’re correcting:
• muscle tension
• central dips
• uneven projection
• and contour irregularities
The goal is to soften the harsh “M” pattern and create:
• smoother transitions
• a softer Cupid’s bow
• balanced central fullness
• and a more feminine flow
The best part?
When done correctly, the lips don’t look filled.
They simply look beautifully shaped.
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or comment SUBSCRIPTION for full M-shape correction and sweetheart lip techniques online
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Why should the bottom lip project more than the top? đź‘„
One of the key principles of lip aesthetics is that the lower lip should generally protrude slightly more than the upper lip.
Why?
Because this creates:
• better facial harmony
• a softer side profile
• and a more natural-looking lip balance
When the upper lip projects too far forward, the lips can start to look:
• heavy
• artificial
• or “ducky”
The goal isn’t equal projection.
It’s creating the right relationship between the two lips.
Beautiful lips are all about proportions.
Sometimes a tiny adjustment in projection can completely change how natural the lips look.
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Transforming complex lips into a flatter lip shape đź‘„
Not every client wants more projection.
Some clients want a flatter, cleaner, more refined profile.
The challenge is that complex lips often have:
• uneven projection
• strong muscle activity
• asymmetries
• and irregular structural support
Simply adding filler usually makes these issues more obvious.
The key is:
• controlling projection
• redistributing support
• refining contours
• and creating a smoother side profile
Because flattening a lip shape is often harder than making lips bigger.
It requires precision, restraint, and understanding how the tissue moves.
The goal isn’t volume.
It’s shape.
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The Ricketts Line & profile balancing ✨
One of the simplest ways to assess a profile is through the Ricketts E-Line.
This line runs from the tip of the nose to the chin and helps evaluate the position of the lips relative to the rest of the face.
But profile balancing isn’t about moving the lips to a line.
It’s about understanding the relationship between:
• the nose
• the lips
• the chin
• and overall facial proportions
Sometimes the answer isn’t bigger lips.
It’s improving chin projection or facial support.
Because true profile balancing is about harmony, not individual features.
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or comment SUBSCRIPTION for full facial assessment and profiling lessons online
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