What plastic surgery? She never showed any signs of aging. |
You really think she was born with that nose? Her cheek bones were never that hight and they can not be positioned higher that where they were 30 years ago, it's called gravity. So those are implants (too sharp to be fillers).
|
| ^ high and tight |
| Are they going to start having senior living facilities with attached daycare now. This is a vanity baby. |
| Kudos to her for whatever work she's had done. It looks great and she looks gorgeous. She's not overdone at all. |
Totally agree! Whatever she did, it was done just right! lol |
No, I was talking about anti-aging, not whatever she had when she was younger, before becoming big. She looks the same as she did 20 years ago. Her body is unbelievable. |
Her body might look the same, in clothes. Her face went under plastic surgery. A human without a single wrinkle after 50 simply doesn't not exist. |
| Her mother and grandmother still look amazing as well. Good genes. |
Lol. Show me anyone who has achieved this with plastic surgery. You don’t seem to understand that aging is about more than just tight skin. The women who use surgery such as facelifts and procedures such as Botox and fillers to achieve smooth skin end up looking like masks. See, e.g., Joan Rivers. For Naomi Campbell and her mother to look so fresh faced and natural is genes. It’s not fair and surgeons can’t replicate it. |
Or the whole Kardashian family. Not a single one looks natural or fresh faced. You look at them and you think “surgery.” It’s so true that surgeons can’t replicate that natural, genetic youthfulness. |
Our face loses fat as we get older. Those are not implants. |
You're clueless. She would lose face fat everywhere equally. Her cheekbones were never this high and hard looking. She had oval shaped face before, what is this? Looking like Madonna
|
This is not true of Black people. |
I’m Black and I was going to post this. Lol. White people think the rules that bind them apply to everybody. If a Black person has wrinkles before 60, it’s from hard living. I’m 49 and my dermatologist won’t prescribe me retinoids because she says my skin is flawless and she fears retinoids could have an effect on the thick collagen that scaffolds African skin. |