UPPER maxillary projection is the key to aesthetics

Suifuel mine is shit despite being white, kind of like the East-Asian woman in the after picture but my zygos are more forward so the transistion is slightly worse, my nose also looks similar. How do you fix this? Bimax + Implants?
 
  • So Sad
  • +1
Reactions: reaper2, Magnum Opus and thecel
Suifuel mine is shit despite being white, kind of like the East-Asian woman in the after picture but my zygos are more forward so the transistion is slightly worse, my nose also looks similar. How do you fix this? Bimax + Implants?
Its hard to believe she ascended like that with only rhinoplasty:

d0f22e6f-93db-4e6a-843e-2420cbafd6f5-jpeg.1033404


I actually checked his IG and no other women had such a huge ascension after just a rhinoplasty. The after pic is either morphed or some jaw surgery.
 
  • +1
Reactions: AscendingHero, thecel, Deleted member 8758 and 1 other person
The questions are: can a bone be deformed to fit that shape? Can it be achieved by stretching the "fingers" of sutures over long periods of time. Is any form of plasticity out of the question or are osteotomies the only option?
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel and Deleted member 6403
The questions are: can a bone be deformed to fit that shape? Can it be achieved by stretching the "fingers" of sutures over long periods of time. Is any form of plasticity out of the question or are osteotomies the only option?
Up to a certain age it should be possible to achieve with hardmewing and applying tons of pressure at the back of the tongue, again depends on age. The younger a person is, the thinner the bones are, so up to like puberty it should be possible to improve the projection of upper maxilla.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Deleted member 8758 and thecel
Oh my Word this thread is pure gold
 
  • Woah
Reactions: thecel
What's the upper maxilla?

The upper maxilla is essentially the Le Fort 2 area minus the Le Fort 1 area.



View attachment 1033427View attachment 1033418View attachment 1033419

Figure 1: The 3 Le Fort fractures. The upper maxilla is Le Fort 2 minus Le Fort 1.



The upper maxilla includes the inner infraorbital rims, the nasal ridge, the canine fossa area (Figure 2), and most importantly, the nasal aperture.



View attachment 1033442

Figure 2: Canine fossae



This post doesn't go into detail about the canine fossa; just know that it's an important part of the upper maxilla.







What does upper maxillary projection look like?

Upper maxillary projection is characterized by the area from the front of the cheekbone to the back of the nose being a smooth transition when viewed from the side, as seen in Figure 3.



View attachment 1033406View attachment 1033407

Figure 3: Almost-side-profile view of a White man with upper maxillary projection



The man in Figure 3 has a seamless "blend" between the zygoma and the back of the nose. Contrast that with this other man who has a clearly defined border in the same spot:



View attachment 1033448

Figure 4: Poor upper maxillary projection



The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



View attachment 1033403

Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla



Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

Another way to look at this is in terms of the position of the nasal aperture, the hole in the skull you breathe through.




View attachment 1033410View attachment 1033408View attachment 1033409

Figure 6: Underprojected, normal, and overprojected nasal apertures



View attachment 1033417View attachment 1033421

Figure 7: The recessed nasal aperture of a Mongoloid and the projected nasal aperture of a Caucasoid



An aesthetic upper maxilla is for the most part a projected nasal aperture.

Here's an East Asian woman who got a nose job as well as some procedure that moved her nasal aperture forward and made the surrounding tissue more slanted forwards toward the center:




View attachment 1033404View attachment 1033405

Figure 8: Before and after of an East Asian woman who got a more projected nasal aperture, making the surrounding contour slanted forward toward the middle like Caucasians



As you can see, she used to have a clearly defined border between the front of her zygos and the back of her nose, and after surgery it turned into a smooth blended transition, which is ideal.







The difference between a projected upper maxilla and a projected nose



This is a recessed subhuman:



View attachment 1033412

Figure 9: A recessed subhuman



Giving him a forward-protruding Caucasoid nose doesn't result in a good look (Figure 10).



View attachment 1033413

Figure 10: Shit



His nasal aperture and the bone around it needs to get pulled forward, like this:



View attachment 1033479

Figure 11: Better



I deliberately kept his nose flat in order to show how a projected upper maxilla with a flat nose mogs a recessed upper maxilla with a projecting nose.







The final nail in the coffin for Mew Indicator Line copers

@loox made a very high-IQ post last year about the faults of the Mew Indicator Line:

https://looksmax.org/threads/how-to-measure-a-recessed-maxilla.122146/post-2598129

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten many views because it's the 60th reply to a thread that claims the Mew Indicator Line is a "great tool." At the time of writing, that thread is in the "Best of the Best" subforum. I think it has merit, but it should be removed from BotB for the Mew Indicator Line's flaws.

What flaws? Well first of all, the Mew Indicator Line (MIL) does a poor job at measuring forward growth. If you think about it, drawing a line from the incisors to the nose tip measures the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper maxilla—though inaccurately because nose size affects the measurement.

A short MIL indicates a more projected lower maxilla compared to the upper, and a long MIL indicates the opposite. Because of the relative nature of the MIL, a more recessed upper maxilla actually causes a shorter and more ideal MIL, which doesn't make sense (Figure 12).




View attachment 1033415

Figure 12: The more recessed a person's upper maxilla, the better the Mew Indicator Line.



As previously mentioned, MIL is affected by nose size, and this makes it an utterly dog shit method of measuring the degree of maxillary projection. If it weren't affected by nose size, it'd serve as a useful tool for measuring the upper/lower projection balance: the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper. But it's useless for measuring that too since it's affected by nose size. Methods such as the maxillary triangle (Figure 13) are superior.



View attachment 1033502

Figure 13: The Maxillary Triangle: a better method of measuring maxillary projection than the Mew Indicator Line.







What's the key takeaway?

Upper maxillary projection is pretty much nasal aperture projection. And nasal aperture projection is the most important thing for getting that "forward-grown look." Flawed methods like the Mew Indicator Line are bad for measuring upper maxillary projection.
Great high value post OP
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
High IQ post. @thecel Can I DM you real quick?
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
What's the upper maxilla?

The upper maxilla is essentially the Le Fort 2 area minus the Le Fort 1 area.



View attachment 1033427View attachment 1033418View attachment 1033419

Figure 1: The 3 Le Fort fractures. The upper maxilla is Le Fort 2 minus Le Fort 1.



The upper maxilla includes the inner infraorbital rims, the nasal ridge, the canine fossa area (Figure 2), and most importantly, the nasal aperture.



View attachment 1033442

Figure 2: Canine fossae



This post doesn't go into detail about the canine fossa; just know that it's an important part of the upper maxilla.







What does upper maxillary projection look like?

Upper maxillary projection is characterized by the area from the front of the cheekbone to the back of the nose being a smooth transition when viewed from the side, as seen in Figure 3.



View attachment 1033406View attachment 1033407

Figure 3: Almost-side-profile view of a White man with upper maxillary projection



The man in Figure 3 has a seamless "blend" between the zygoma and the back of the nose. Contrast that with this other man who has a clearly defined border in the same spot:



View attachment 1033448

Figure 4: Poor upper maxillary projection



The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



View attachment 1033403

Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla



Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

Another way to look at this is in terms of the position of the nasal aperture, the hole in the skull you breathe through.




View attachment 1033410View attachment 1033408View attachment 1033409

Figure 6: Underprojected, normal, and overprojected nasal apertures



View attachment 1033417View attachment 1033421

Figure 7: The recessed nasal aperture of a Mongoloid and the projected nasal aperture of a Caucasoid



An aesthetic upper maxilla is for the most part a projected nasal aperture.

Here's an East Asian woman who got a nose job as well as some procedure that moved her nasal aperture forward and made the surrounding tissue more slanted forwards toward the center:




View attachment 1033404View attachment 1033405

Figure 8: Before and after of an East Asian woman who got a more projected nasal aperture, making the surrounding contour slanted forward toward the middle like Caucasians



As you can see, she used to have a clearly defined border between the front of her zygos and the back of her nose, and after surgery it turned into a smooth blended transition, which is ideal.







The difference between a projected upper maxilla and a projected nose



This is a recessed subhuman:



View attachment 1033412

Figure 9: A recessed subhuman



Giving him a forward-protruding Caucasoid nose doesn't result in a good look (Figure 10).



View attachment 1033413

Figure 10: Shit



His nasal aperture and the bone around it needs to get pulled forward, like this:



View attachment 1033479

Figure 11: Better



I deliberately kept his nose flat in order to show how a projected upper maxilla with a flat nose mogs a recessed upper maxilla with a projecting nose.







The final nail in the coffin for Mew Indicator Line copers

@loox made a very high-IQ post last year about the faults of the Mew Indicator Line:

https://looksmax.org/threads/how-to-measure-a-recessed-maxilla.122146/post-2598129

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten many views because it's the 60th reply to a thread that claims the Mew Indicator Line is a "great tool." At the time of writing, that thread is in the "Best of the Best" subforum. I think it has merit, but it should be removed from BotB for the Mew Indicator Line's flaws.

What flaws? Well first of all, the Mew Indicator Line (MIL) does a poor job at measuring forward growth. If you think about it, drawing a line from the incisors to the nose tip measures the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper maxilla—though inaccurately because nose size affects the measurement.

A short MIL indicates a more projected lower maxilla compared to the upper, and a long MIL indicates the opposite. Because of the relative nature of the MIL, a more recessed upper maxilla actually causes a shorter and more ideal MIL, which doesn't make sense (Figure 12).




View attachment 1033415

Figure 12: The more recessed a person's upper maxilla, the better the Mew Indicator Line.



As previously mentioned, MIL is affected by nose size, and this makes it an utterly dog shit method of measuring the degree of maxillary projection. If it weren't affected by nose size, it'd serve as a useful tool for measuring the upper/lower projection balance: the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper. But it's useless for measuring that too since it's affected by nose size. Methods such as the maxillary triangle (Figure 13) are superior.



View attachment 1033502

Figure 13: The Maxillary Triangle: a better method of measuring maxillary projection than the Mew Indicator Line.







What's the key takeaway?

Upper maxillary projection is pretty much nasal aperture projection. And nasal aperture projection is the most important thing for getting that "forward-grown look." Flawed methods like the Mew Indicator Line are bad for measuring upper maxillary projection.
thecel I wanted to talk to you about the maxillary base being put in the posterir part and the anteface


Maxillary base
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Cool. elab
dr sailer talks about the anteface and how attractive faces are forward grown

he was talking about bimaxillary rotation using CCW rotation on both jaws

he said he used this device to move the maxillary base, leaving the upper part of the maxilla with some distraction device

Rotation Advancement 1
Rotation Advancement Rotation Advancement Rotation Advancement
Rotation Advancement Rotation Advancement Rotation Advancement
he talks about moving the maxillary base in the posterior part, and when he did that he had so much good results with the facial surgeries

Maxillary base

Is it possible for a surgeon to do this thecel can u recommend jaw surgeons or email them if its possible to get this done for under 15k
 
  • Woah
  • +1
Reactions: Racky, AscendingHero and thecel
Explains why I have a huge fucking beak nose lmao
 
  • So Sad
Reactions: thecel
Why does this curry not look good then?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20210313_171000.jpg
    IMG_20210313_171000.jpg
    41.1 KB · Views: 144
  • Love it
  • So Sad
Reactions: AutisticBeaner and thecel
I have good maxilla projectiom but recessed lower jaw resulting in an overbite.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Need2Ascend, SPFromNY914 and thecel
Suifuel mine is shit despite being white, kind of like the East-Asian woman in the after picture but my zygos are more forward so the transistion is slightly worse, my nose also looks similar. How do you fix this? Bimax + Implants?
custom infraorbital implant
 
  • +1
Reactions: Racky, thecel and StrangerDanger
Funny, I've also come to realize this. I just didn't think of it in as sophisticated a manner as you. But I was thinking pretty much the same thing, especially the part where you talk about how the bones taper forward toward the nose when the upper maxilla is projected forwards.

I think this has some to do with why vinnie hacker is attractive. He has great upper maxilla projection. Even from a frontal view you can see how his bones taper towards the nose. It just adds a much-needed element of angularity
Lmj
Vn
 
  • +1
Reactions: Tallooksmaxxer, Racky, AscendingHero and 2 others
What's the upper maxilla?

The upper maxilla is essentially the Le Fort 2 area minus the Le Fort 1 area.



View attachment 1033427View attachment 1033418View attachment 1033419

Figure 1: The 3 Le Fort fractures. The upper maxilla is Le Fort 2 minus Le Fort 1.



The upper maxilla includes the inner infraorbital rims, the nasal ridge, the canine fossa area (Figure 2), and most importantly, the nasal aperture.



View attachment 1033442

Figure 2: Canine fossae



This post doesn't go into detail about the canine fossa; just know that it's an important part of the upper maxilla.







What does upper maxillary projection look like?

Upper maxillary projection is characterized by the area from the front of the cheekbone to the back of the nose being a smooth transition when viewed from the side, as seen in Figure 3.



View attachment 1033406View attachment 1033407

Figure 3: Almost-side-profile view of a White man with upper maxillary projection



The man in Figure 3 has a seamless "blend" between the zygoma and the back of the nose. Contrast that with this other man who has a clearly defined border in the same spot:



View attachment 1033448

Figure 4: Poor upper maxillary projection



The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



View attachment 1033403

Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla



Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

Another way to look at this is in terms of the position of the nasal aperture, the hole in the skull you breathe through.




View attachment 1033410View attachment 1033408View attachment 1033409

Figure 6: Underprojected, normal, and overprojected nasal apertures



View attachment 1033417View attachment 1033421

Figure 7: The recessed nasal aperture of a Mongoloid and the projected nasal aperture of a Caucasoid



An aesthetic upper maxilla is for the most part a projected nasal aperture.

Here's an East Asian woman who got a nose job as well as some procedure that moved her nasal aperture forward and made the surrounding tissue more slanted forwards toward the center:




View attachment 1033404View attachment 1033405

Figure 8: Before and after of an East Asian woman who got a more projected nasal aperture, making the surrounding contour slanted forward toward the middle like Caucasians



As you can see, she used to have a clearly defined border between the front of her zygos and the back of her nose, and after surgery it turned into a smooth blended transition, which is ideal.







The difference between a projected upper maxilla and a projected nose



This is a recessed subhuman:



View attachment 1033412

Figure 9: A recessed subhuman



Giving him a forward-protruding Caucasoid nose doesn't result in a good look (Figure 10).



View attachment 1033413

Figure 10: Shit



His nasal aperture and the bone around it needs to get pulled forward, like this:



View attachment 1033479

Figure 11: Better



I deliberately kept his nose flat in order to show how a projected upper maxilla with a flat nose mogs a recessed upper maxilla with a projecting nose.







The final nail in the coffin for Mew Indicator Line copers

@loox made a very high-IQ post last year about the faults of the Mew Indicator Line:

https://looksmax.org/threads/how-to-measure-a-recessed-maxilla.122146/post-2598129

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten many views because it's the 60th reply to a thread that claims the Mew Indicator Line is a "great tool." At the time of writing, that thread is in the "Best of the Best" subforum. I think it has merit, but it should be removed from BotB for the Mew Indicator Line's flaws.

What flaws? Well first of all, the Mew Indicator Line (MIL) does a poor job at measuring forward growth. If you think about it, drawing a line from the incisors to the nose tip measures the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper maxilla—though inaccurately because nose size affects the measurement.

A short MIL indicates a more projected lower maxilla compared to the upper, and a long MIL indicates the opposite. Because of the relative nature of the MIL, a more recessed upper maxilla actually causes a shorter and more ideal MIL, which doesn't make sense (Figure 12).




View attachment 1033415

Figure 12: The more recessed a person's upper maxilla, the better the Mew Indicator Line.



As previously mentioned, MIL is affected by nose size, and this makes it an utterly dog shit method of measuring the degree of maxillary projection. If it weren't affected by nose size, it'd serve as a useful tool for measuring the upper/lower projection balance: the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper. But it's useless for measuring that too since it's affected by nose size. Methods such as the maxillary triangle (Figure 13) are superior.



View attachment 1033502

Figure 13: The Maxillary Triangle: a better method of measuring maxillary projection than the Mew Indicator Line.







What's the key takeaway?

Upper maxillary projection is pretty much nasal aperture projection. And nasal aperture projection is the most important thing for getting that "forward-grown look." Flawed methods like the Mew Indicator Line are bad for measuring upper maxillary projection.
So just have a good maxilla? What's all this ''upper'' bullshit.
 
  • Hmm...
Reactions: thecel
this is some self hating mental gymnastics
 
  • Hmm...
  • Ugh..
Reactions: Deleted member 16834 and thecel
@thecel can I dm you
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
bimax affect the triangle?
 
What's the upper maxilla?

The upper maxilla is essentially the Le Fort 2 area minus the Le Fort 1 area.



View attachment 1033427View attachment 1033418View attachment 1033419

Figure 1: The 3 Le Fort fractures. The upper maxilla is Le Fort 2 minus Le Fort 1.



The upper maxilla includes the inner infraorbital rims, the nasal ridge, the canine fossa area (Figure 2), and most importantly, the nasal aperture.



View attachment 1033442

Figure 2: Canine fossae



This post doesn't go into detail about the canine fossa; just know that it's an important part of the upper maxilla.







What does upper maxillary projection look like?

Upper maxillary projection is characterized by the area from the front of the cheekbone to the back of the nose being a smooth transition when viewed from the side, as seen in Figure 3.



View attachment 1033406View attachment 1033407

Figure 3: Almost-side-profile view of a White man with upper maxillary projection



The man in Figure 3 has a seamless "blend" between the zygoma and the back of the nose. Contrast that with this other man who has a clearly defined border in the same spot:



View attachment 1033448

Figure 4: Poor upper maxillary projection



The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



View attachment 1033403

Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla



Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

Another way to look at this is in terms of the position of the nasal aperture, the hole in the skull you breathe through.




View attachment 1033410View attachment 1033408View attachment 1033409

Figure 6: Underprojected, normal, and overprojected nasal apertures



View attachment 1033417View attachment 1033421

Figure 7: The recessed nasal aperture of a Mongoloid and the projected nasal aperture of a Caucasoid



An aesthetic upper maxilla is for the most part a projected nasal aperture.

Here's an East Asian woman who got a nose job as well as some procedure that moved her nasal aperture forward and made the surrounding tissue more slanted forwards toward the center:




View attachment 1033404View attachment 1033405

Figure 8: Before and after of an East Asian woman who got a more projected nasal aperture, making the surrounding contour slanted forward toward the middle like Caucasians



As you can see, she used to have a clearly defined border between the front of her zygos and the back of her nose, and after surgery it turned into a smooth blended transition, which is ideal.







The difference between a projected upper maxilla and a projected nose



This is a recessed subhuman:



View attachment 1033412

Figure 9: A recessed subhuman



Giving him a forward-protruding Caucasoid nose doesn't result in a good look (Figure 10).



View attachment 1033413

Figure 10: Shit



His nasal aperture and the bone around it needs to get pulled forward, like this:



View attachment 1033479

Figure 11: Better



I deliberately kept his nose flat in order to show how a projected upper maxilla with a flat nose mogs a recessed upper maxilla with a projecting nose.







The final nail in the coffin for Mew Indicator Line copers

@loox made a very high-IQ post last year about the faults of the Mew Indicator Line:

https://looksmax.org/threads/how-to-measure-a-recessed-maxilla.122146/post-2598129

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten many views because it's the 60th reply to a thread that claims the Mew Indicator Line is a "great tool." At the time of writing, that thread is in the "Best of the Best" subforum. I think it has merit, but it should be removed from BotB for the Mew Indicator Line's flaws.

What flaws? Well first of all, the Mew Indicator Line (MIL) does a poor job at measuring forward growth. If you think about it, drawing a line from the incisors to the nose tip measures the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper maxilla—though inaccurately because nose size affects the measurement.

A short MIL indicates a more projected lower maxilla compared to the upper, and a long MIL indicates the opposite. Because of the relative nature of the MIL, a more recessed upper maxilla actually causes a shorter and more ideal MIL, which doesn't make sense (Figure 12).




View attachment 1033415

Figure 12: The more recessed a person's upper maxilla, the better the Mew Indicator Line.



As previously mentioned, MIL is affected by nose size, and this makes it an utterly dog shit method of measuring the degree of maxillary projection. If it weren't affected by nose size, it'd serve as a useful tool for measuring the upper/lower projection balance: the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper. But it's useless for measuring that too since it's affected by nose size. Methods such as the maxillary triangle (Figure 13) are superior.



View attachment 1033502

Figure 13: The Maxillary Triangle: a better method of measuring maxillary projection than the Mew Indicator Line.







What's the key takeaway?

Upper maxillary projection is pretty much nasal aperture projection. And nasal aperture projection is the most important thing for getting that "forward-grown look." Flawed methods like the Mew Indicator Line are bad for measuring upper maxillary projection.
This is making me think I can’t make implants in them safe work because I need to pull the nasal base up as a whole which I doubt any surgeon will do
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Would paranasal implants have a big effect in advavinge the maxilla area
 
  • +1
Reactions: AscendingHero, thecel and Deleted member 6403
you're on the right track but it isn't everything tbh

i have a neutral orbital vector and upper maxilla and i still have slight lower eye lid droopiness when i don't squint
 
  • So Sad
Reactions: thecel
you're on the right track but it isn't everything tbh

i have a neutral orbital vector and upper maxilla and i still have slight lower eye lid droopiness when i don't squint
What’s neutral orbital vector and upper maxilla mean? U had implant ?
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
This is the best thread I've seen on looksmax so far.

I was wondering about the model Christen Harper. Apparently she is a Japanese/Euromerican hapa. Why doesn't she look more Asian? Because her upper maxilla is forward-set like a European.

Christen harper 1 Christen harper 3
 
  • Woah
  • Love it
  • +1
Reactions: reaper2, Deleted member 16834, AscendingHero and 1 other person
This is making me think I can’t make implants in them safe work because I need to pull the nasal base up as a whole which I doubt any surgeon will do
Thats impossible to do, you cant change how low or high your nasal base sits. I wish you could, because shortening my nose length by a few mms through raising the base would be enough to qualify me as a normie. If you have sny idea on how to do that,pm me pls.
 
  • Woah
Reactions: thecel
  • JFL
Reactions: toolateforme, SAR, thecel and 1 other person
What are some symptoms of a recessed maxilla? Is it true if you have trouble breathing through your nose (usually thru one nostril), your maxilla is likely recessed?
 
  • +1
Reactions: SAR, AscendingHero, thecel and 1 other person
Ive noticed that most europeans have forwardset maxillas while most non whites are recessed.
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Ok so I thought lefort moved the nasal area a little bit because of you the lower maxilla is positioned. Would you reocmmend implants or fat grafts instead tho? This is a side view I just took today. I still am pursuing bimax but in the meantime I’d like to do something for improvement
Thats impossible to do, you cant change how low or high your nasal base sits. I wish you could, because shortening my nose length by a few mms through raising the base would be enough to qualify me as a normie. If you have sny idea on how to do that,pm me pls.
879466E6 97C1 42C7 934C F5B21D52245C
 
Last edited:
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Thats impossible to do, you cant change how low or high your nasal base sits. I wish you could, because shortening my nose length by a few mms through raising the base would be enough to qualify me as a normie. If you have sny idea on how to do that,pm me pls.
What throws me is the fact that my nasal base will stay the same so I don’t know if it’s even possible to make midface implants or fillers work for me. My plastic surgeon is skilled but I don’t know if even skill will make this work out. Also lefort 2 is likely not in the cards just due to no one willing to do it here although I’m still going to try for it or have whoever does the bimax do a higher cut
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Upper maxilla is pretty overrated tbh, its good for anti aging but bad for masculine type of hollow cheeks, where the areas next to the nose are hollowed out:
1414128 500w 1

Opry has this high set zygos look because of his recessed upper maxilla:
9385083ec76236beb554a4067c46f35d

Obviously, the face needs to be very lean, but these sort of hollow cheeks wouldnt be possible on someone with forward upper maxilla and big zygos (barrett). If the sacrifice of one feature means benefit for another feature that is objectively more important, ill take the latter.
 
  • JFL
  • +1
  • Hmm...
Reactions: AscendingHero, subhuman incel, Need2Ascend and 2 others
What's the upper maxilla?

The upper maxilla is essentially the Le Fort 2 area minus the Le Fort 1 area.



View attachment 1033427View attachment 1033418View attachment 1033419

Figure 1: The 3 Le Fort fractures. The upper maxilla is Le Fort 2 minus Le Fort 1.



The upper maxilla includes the inner infraorbital rims, the nasal ridge, the canine fossa area (Figure 2), and most importantly, the nasal aperture.



View attachment 1033442

Figure 2: Canine fossae



This post doesn't go into detail about the canine fossa; just know that it's an important part of the upper maxilla.







What does upper maxillary projection look like?

Upper maxillary projection is characterized by the area from the front of the cheekbone to the back of the nose being a smooth transition when viewed from the side, as seen in Figure 3.



View attachment 1033406View attachment 1033407

Figure 3: Almost-side-profile view of a White man with upper maxillary projection



The man in Figure 3 has a seamless "blend" between the zygoma and the back of the nose. Contrast that with this other man who has a clearly defined border in the same spot:



View attachment 1033448

Figure 4: Poor upper maxillary projection



The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



View attachment 1033403

Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla



Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

Another way to look at this is in terms of the position of the nasal aperture, the hole in the skull you breathe through.




View attachment 1033410View attachment 1033408View attachment 1033409

Figure 6: Underprojected, normal, and overprojected nasal apertures



View attachment 1033417View attachment 1033421

Figure 7: The recessed nasal aperture of a Mongoloid and the projected nasal aperture of a Caucasoid



An aesthetic upper maxilla is for the most part a projected nasal aperture.

Here's an East Asian woman who got a nose job as well as some procedure that moved her nasal aperture forward and made the surrounding tissue more slanted forwards toward the center:




View attachment 1033404View attachment 1033405

Figure 8: Before and after of an East Asian woman who got a more projected nasal aperture, making the surrounding contour slanted forward toward the middle like Caucasians



As you can see, she used to have a clearly defined border between the front of her zygos and the back of her nose, and after surgery it turned into a smooth blended transition, which is ideal.







The difference between a projected upper maxilla and a projected nose



This is a recessed subhuman:



View attachment 1033412

Figure 9: A recessed subhuman



Giving him a forward-protruding Caucasoid nose doesn't result in a good look (Figure 10).



View attachment 1033413

Figure 10: Shit



His nasal aperture and the bone around it needs to get pulled forward, like this:



View attachment 1033479

Figure 11: Better



I deliberately kept his nose flat in order to show how a projected upper maxilla with a flat nose mogs a recessed upper maxilla with a projecting nose.







The final nail in the coffin for Mew Indicator Line copers

@loox made a very high-IQ post last year about the faults of the Mew Indicator Line:

https://looksmax.org/threads/how-to-measure-a-recessed-maxilla.122146/post-2598129

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten many views because it's the 60th reply to a thread that claims the Mew Indicator Line is a "great tool." At the time of writing, that thread is in the "Best of the Best" subforum. I think it has merit, but it should be removed from BotB for the Mew Indicator Line's flaws.

What flaws? Well first of all, the Mew Indicator Line (MIL) does a poor job at measuring forward growth. If you think about it, drawing a line from the incisors to the nose tip measures the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper maxilla—though inaccurately because nose size affects the measurement.

A short MIL indicates a more projected lower maxilla compared to the upper, and a long MIL indicates the opposite. Because of the relative nature of the MIL, a more recessed upper maxilla actually causes a shorter and more ideal MIL, which doesn't make sense (Figure 12).




View attachment 1033415

Figure 12: The more recessed a person's upper maxilla, the better the Mew Indicator Line.



As previously mentioned, MIL is affected by nose size, and this makes it an utterly dog shit method of measuring the degree of maxillary projection. If it weren't affected by nose size, it'd serve as a useful tool for measuring the upper/lower projection balance: the projection of the lower maxilla relative to the upper. But it's useless for measuring that too since it's affected by nose size. Methods such as the maxillary triangle (Figure 13) are superior.



View attachment 1033502

Figure 13: The Maxillary Triangle: a better method of measuring maxillary projection than the Mew Indicator Line.







What's the key takeaway?

Upper maxillary projection is pretty much nasal aperture projection. And nasal aperture projection is the most important thing for getting that "forward-grown look." Flawed methods like the Mew Indicator Line are bad for measuring upper maxillary projection.
So would this mean I’m better off doing mid face fat grafting or implants by a skilled plastic surgeon? Asking because I’ve only been offered lefort 1 and while I’m still planning on getting it for functional reasons as well I would like some feed back if it’s advisable to get work done for my upper maxilla in the meantime as the bimax is going to be a long time potentially and I could always have the surgeon account for my newly projected upper maxilla so I remain in harmony.
03BAB142 AB39 4E0B 95E1 A3429C3FC2D4
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Obviously, the face needs to be very lean, but these sort of hollow cheeks wouldnt be possible on someone with forward upper maxilla and big zygos (barrett). If the sacrifice of one feature means benefit for another feature that is objectively more important, ill take the latter.

“and big zygos”

What about forward upper maxilla and small zygos? That doesn’t sacrifice hollow cheeks.
 
  • +1
Reactions: subhuman incel
Surgeries to fix this? Except lefort 3
 
  • +1
Reactions: AscendingHero and thecel
“and big zygos”

What about forward upper maxilla and small zygos? That doesn’t sacrifice hollow cheeks
It does, it creates the type 1 hollow cheeks rather than 2
7223be819e13ebe706399fd4e0604cc9

I mean both are good to have, but 2 is much better and rarer imo
 
  • +1
Reactions: thecel
Upper maxilla is pretty overrated tbh, its good for anti aging but bad for masculine type of hollow cheeks, where the areas next to the nose are hollowed out:
View attachment 1231993
Opry has this high set zygos look because of his recessed upper maxilla:
View attachment 1232002
Obviously, the face needs to be very lean, but these sort of hollow cheeks wouldnt be possible on someone with forward upper maxilla and big zygos (barrett). If the sacrifice of one feature means benefit for another feature that is objectively more important, ill take the latter.
True, a projected upper maxilla can look absolutely aesthetic but it isn't masculine
What all MM however have in common though is a WIDE upper maxilla. Chico, O'Pry, Barrett, Gandy, Meeks, even Orb and Amnesia have above average upper maxilla width(not to confuse with byzigomatic width since you could have a wide face coming from high bone mass on your zygomatic arches rather than a wide upper maxilla)
Intererestingly actors, like Somerhalder or Pitt, on the other hand have rather normal or below average maxilla width
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: AscendingHero, subhuman incel, thecel and 1 other person
The difference is due to the slope of the bone around the nasal aperture. With a forward upper maxilla, the bone on the left and right taper forward and inward toward the nose. With a flat upper maxilla, the bone on both sides of the upper maxilla are parallel.



forward-maxilla-is-a-projected-nasal-area-png.1033403


Figure 5: Caucasoid projected upper maxilla vs. Mongoloid flat upper maxilla


Projected upper maxillas as typically seen in Caucasoids, whereas a flat upper maxilla is a Mongoloid trait.

ayo!

1632948213267
1632948296156
1632948213267


the MRI scans at the bottoms look just like the Caucasian–Asian comparison drawings!
 
  • +1
Reactions: valhalar, AscendingHero, Deleted member 5180 and 2 others
@subhuman incel
 
  • +1
  • Woah
Reactions: subhuman incel and thecel
Faurk this is a good post
 
  • +1
  • Love it
Reactions: AscendingHero, subhuman incel and thecel
is he recessed?
1632948712784


@subhuman incel
 
  • Woah
  • +1
Reactions: AscendingHero, ChristianChad, thecel and 1 other person
Do you think retractive orthodontics with headgear and elastics have the potential to recess the nasal base too at 14-15 years when the shape of the upper part of face is mostly done? found a study that the connections between zygos and maxilla fuse around 15 or 16 but never that much later, can mse weaken them to gain a few mms with facepulling? seen a study of adult woman with more projected nose after this, but guess its mostly luck
 
  • Woah
  • +1
Reactions: AscendingHero and thecel

Similar threads

Dastan
Replies
6
Views
693
CyberPsychodelic
CyberPsychodelic
aspiringexcel
Replies
124
Views
3K
ducksoover
D
vratisevojvodo
Replies
2
Views
1K
don187
don187
IOS
Replies
32
Views
1K
IOS
IOS
Bheimal
Replies
7
Views
2K
Youssef_
Youssef_

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top