Contouring Sydney – Medical Aesthetics Potts Point
Light, shadow, and proportion
You already work with these three elements through makeup - adjusting how features are perceived from day to day. Treatment takes the same approach, using subtle adjustments across different areas of the face to enhance balance, shape, and overall refinement.
Dr Brandon assesses the face as a whole, guiding what should be enhanced, softened, or left alone.
The Approach
Understanding your structure comes first
Treatment starts with understanding how your face is read - not selecting a product or a device. Proportion, structure, and movement are considered together before any adjustment is made. From there, a plan is built using the most appropriate approach – whether that involves skin treatments, regenerative work, or medical treatments where appropriate.
Structure & proportion
Treatments that refine facial shape and restore balance by adjusting structure and volume where needed. Delivered using medical approaches, guided by anatomy, and designed to look natural.
Position & movement
Subtle medical treatments used where appropriate to adjust how features sit and move – improving balance and expression without altering how you look.
Skin quality
Skin and regenerative treatments that improve texture, tone, and overall skin quality – supporting how the face is perceived as a whole.
FREQUENTLY ASKED
Facial balancing and volume restoration in Sydney – your questions
No. Most patients don’t - and it’s usually better that way.
Facial refinement isn’t about choosing between treatments. It’s about understanding how your features sit together and what will improve overall balance.
The consultation is designed to assess your face as a whole and recommend the most appropriate approach.
The face is assessed as a whole, not feature by feature.
Proportion, structure, and movement are considered together to understand what is creating imbalance or drawing attention.
Treatment is then guided by what will make the most natural-looking difference.
Treating a single feature in isolation is often where results start to look unnatural.
The principles are similar, but the approach is more considered. Rather than focusing on a single feature, facial refinement looks at how light, shadow, and proportion work across the face to create a balanced result.
Focusing on volume alone assumes that more product leads to a better result. In reality, it can lead to outcomes that feel unbalanced or overdone.
The aim isn’t to use a certain amount, but to achieve the right result. That’s why treatment is planned around your face as a whole, not a set volume.
Yes. That is always the aim.
Treatment is designed to refine and enhance your existing features, not change them. The result should look natural and consistent with you.
It depends on the individual, but features are rarely treated in isolation.
For example, the under-eye area, mid-face, and cheek structure often influence each other, as do the jawline and chin.
Looking at these relationships is what creates a more balanced outcome.
Not always.
Some concerns can be improved with skin or device-based treatments, while others may benefit from medical approaches to address structure, volume, or movement.
This is determined during consultation based on what will create the most natural result.
The aim is always subtle refinement. Changes are designed to improve how the face is perceived overall, rather than making any one adjustment obvious.
That’s very common.
The focus is on assessing your current facial structure and balance, rather than continuing with a previous approach.
In some cases, treatment may be adjusted to create a more natural or refined result.
Ready to talk?
Book a consultation at Cleon By Dr Brandon.
The consultation comes before anything else – online or face to face at Potts Point.