Anonymous wrote:I started getting fillers to the cheek area around 40. I’m 45 now. I’m thin and looked tired pre-fillers. They make a subtle, but great, difference. I try to keep it natural and not overdo it. When I first started getting fillers, I didn’t tell DH. He commented me that I looked really nice- he couldn’t figure out what was difference but saw an improvement.
Avoid fillers to the lip area. I’ve never seen this look good or natural. I know a lot of people who have gone to top doctors who strive for a natural look but it never works.
I could've written the first part of your post but disagree a little with the italicized.
I think the newer, pliable fillers can be OK for lips -if- the woman had naturally large, full lips to begin with. And the injector has an extremely light hand. This is no different than the light touch you're describing for your cheeks — you asked a provider to put back what nature/time took away in your cheek area as you aged.
I am south Mediterranean and have had big lips on a wide mouth my entire life. When the collagen started to go away in my 40s (as yours did in your cheeks), I started ultra-light injections to restore their natural, god-given appearance. No duck lips, no goals to look like some more voluptuous woman I had never been in the first place