Showing posts with label theory of beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theory of beauty. Show all posts

What Is Your Face Telling Others About You?



Even though phone calls, emails, SMS and online chat are such important parts of the way we transmit ideas and information in today’s world, the most important conversations and decisions are usually saved for face-to-face meetings. One major reason for this is because facial expressions and movements are still so integral to human communication. So much of what we think about others depends on what we see in their faces.



The features on a person’s face can change or determine how they are perceived, and we are all subconsciously affected by these cues. Every time we see a face, we make judgments on that person's character and personality, and all this happens instantly and automatically in our brains.

Even when most of us think that a person’s facial features shouldn’t matter, we rely on them far more than we imagine, to decide things like how trustworthy, how friendly and how dependable others are.  In fact, there is a lot of evidence that people in roles of leadership in business, politics, military and sports, for example, are often given those roles based on their facial features and not necessarily based on their ability.

Your facial features can determine your destiny


What is the Ideal Female Body Shape and Why?

What is the ideal female body shape? It depends if you're asking a man or a woman.

For women, the ideal will be a fashion model's body, a tall, willowy body with a modest bustline, a small waist-to-hip ratio, and thin, muscled thighs. According to women's ideal of the perfect female body, she should be 70 inches tall, have a BMI of 16.5 (underweight BMI), and have a hip size that is just 46 percent larger than her waist size.


A composite of celebrity body parts showing the differences of men & women's ideas of the perfect female body

Do You Have Dry Skin? Top Five Causes Of Dry Skin


Dry skin conditions often contribute to irritated, sensitive skin, and can lead to premature aging symptoms such as wrinkles and a dull complexion. 


If your skin often feels rough and dry, consider if these factors may be the cause:


Sleeping Well Actually Helps You Look Well - Study Finds Link Between Beauty Sleep and Facial Appearance

We're all familiar with the term beauty sleep, but most of us think the effects of sleep-deprivation are minimal or temporary. A study by researchers at the University Hospitals Case Medical Center evaluated the skin of 60 women aged 30-49 years of age, and found that those who rated their quality of nightly sleep to be poor actually had increased signs of skin deterioration and aging. Their skin also showed a decreased ability to recover from environmental factors such as wounds and sun damage. 

How to be Beautiful - Finding Your Facial Harmony

If you ask a person why they would consider plastic surgery or cosmetic treatments, usually they will tell you they dislike their nose, or wish they had bigger eyes, or want to change their chin. Some would ask for Angelina Jolie's lips or Scarlett Johannsen's nose, thinking that the fuller lips or perkier nose would make them more beautiful. 

Yet study after study has failed to identify the 'Perfect' nose or chin or lips, because it is not the specific shape or size of each facial feature that makes a face attractive, it is how all of those features harmonize with each other. This is the study of facial harmonics, or profiloplasty. By improving the harmony of facial features in relation to each other, we can improve an individual's features so they look like themselves, but more aesthetically pleasing.


How To Avoid Botox - Prevent Wrinkles With A Healthy Lifestyle

Can skincare help you avoid Botox? Not as much as lifestyle choices
I was recently asked to contribute some quotes for a local magazine, and one of the questions the reporter asked was, 'how early in age would women have to begin using anti-aging skin products so they could avoid the need for treatments such as Botox.' I think this question is very interesting, because it shows that many people are unaware of the ongoing effects of environment and lifestyle choices on their skin.

Many people only start worrying about wrinkles in their thirties, when the stresses of hectic, active or unhealthy lifestyles start showing up in the form of dull skin or fine lines on previously pristine complexions. By their forties, the damage would have worsened enough that indeed, Botox, lasers and skin tightening therapies would be a god-send. Applying anti-aging products at that stage may not be enough to reverse or delay the damage that was already done. 

Should women be using anti-aging skincare in their teens and twenties to prevent effects of aging in later years? Anti-aging creams and lotions have certainly improved vastly in previous years, and many have proven skin smoothing and tightening qualities, but most are designed to replenish and boost insufficient collagen production, which is not a concern in such a young age. Others contain retinoids, which work by encouraging the rate of exfoliation and skin renewal, also not a concern when the skin is young and healthy and able to renew itself naturally. These anti-aging skin products are mainly focused at the 30s to 40s age group, when natural skin rejuvenation qualities of the skin have been compromised or decreased as part of the aging process.

Skincare products can be helpful but should not be the key focus when the goal is to prevent signs of premature aging. Aging is a process that begins as early as birth, and some scientists even argue it is a process that commences at the moment of conception. The key building block of healthy skin, collagen, declines at a rate of about 1% per year, so a 30 year old woman will have lost about 30% of her collagen, although these factors, as outlined below, may cause that rate of deterioration to be accelerated. 

Facial Symmetry - Do The Two Sides Of Your Face Match?

脸部对称-您左右脸对称吗?


Most people do not realise the importance of facial symmetry. If you draw a line directly down from the middle of your forehead down to your chin, the two sides of your face will most probably have some differences.


Photographer Julian Wolkenstein took pictures of many different people, and created a whole face out of the two sides of each person's face. The difference between the left side face and right side face of these people can be very obvious and pronounced, as you can see in these pictures.



许多人没有发现脸部对称的重要性。如果您从额头至下颚画一条中分线,您很有可能会发现您的左右脸有一些差异。

摄影师Julian Nolkenstein拍摄了许多不同人的脸部照片,将他们脸部划分为左右两边,再将同一边的脸组成完整的头像。她发现许多人左右边脸的样貌有明显的差异。






Some scientists believe that facial symmetry is an indication of the effects of environment and nutrition during their growth and developmental stages. So, the more symmetrical the face, the more we find it to be attractive, because this indicates that the person is healthy and has good genes. 

You can see the symmetry in the faces of these famous people -


一些科学家相信脸部对称是一项指标,显示环境和营养对生长期与发育期的影响。因此,一张脸越对称,我们就觉得越有吸引力,因为这显示了此人拥有健康及良好基因。
您可看看这些人的脸部对称。



就如下图所示:

Scarlett Johanssen

scarlett johansson

Penelope Cruz

penelope cruz

Justin Bieber

justin bieber


Eva Longoria

flip eva longoria

Do you agree that people who are symmetrical are more attractive? You can examine the symmetry of your own face at Echoism.org.

您赞成越对称的脸,越具吸引力吗?您可在Echoism.org测试自己脸部的对称。

-- Cosmetic Medicine, MD

Dr. Liow Tiong Sin is an aesthetic practitioner who practices in Kuala Lumpur and Melaka, Malaysia. He has more than 12 years of expertise with non-surgical cosmetic treatments, and  conducts training courses for other doctors from all around Asia. To connect with Dr. Liow, Like Cosmedmd's Facebook page. medical centre website or email

The Miss Malaysia Controversy - Too White For Malaysia?

Kimberley Ann Estrop-Leggett
Miss Malaysia 2012
Recently there have been a few articles in the newspaper and on the internet about Kimberley Leggett, the 2012 Miss Malaysia title holder being 'too white'. These are the words of a journalist at The International Business Times, who wrote that Miss Leggett certainly resembled Europeans and North Americans much more than she did a country that was predominantly made up of Malays, Chinese and Indians.

I followed the development of this controversy with some amusement as people rose up to defend the Miss Malaysia program and its winner. The argument goes that the beauty pageant win was based on overall looks, presentation and ability, and was certainly never meant to conform to any defined racial looks.


Miss Leggett, certainly a very beautiful and personable young lady, who I previously have had the pleasure of meeting in person, owes her caucasian looks to her British father and Serani (mixed European and Malay) mother. Like Deborah Priya Henry, her Miss Malaysia predecessor, Kimberley Leggett probably represents the pan-Asian look that we previously discussed as the beauty ideal for many Asian women. The subject of her eligibility to compete as a representative of an Asian nation aside, certainly these women have the multi-racial looks that tend to earmark successful competitors at international beauty pageants.


Certainly as the world becomes more global, racial boundaries become less defined, and cultures and races intermarry, the ideals of beauty have similarly evolved. It also has been noted before that many previous winners of international pageants hail from Latin American countries such as Venezuela and Puerto Rico, where the majority of the population is comprised of mixed races.


Having no idea of the judging criteria or machinations of the beauty queen selection process, I cannot be the judge of the fairness of Miss Leggett's selection as the face of Malaysian beauty. However, as I have previously noted - in this article here, as a species humans tend to favor individuals from a mixed background, as they tend to have a 'genetically average' look - ie. do not have any of the negative characteristics that are seen in persons seen as typically Chinese or Indian or British, for example. Studies also suggest that we find these people more attractive as their genes have a greater variety and tend to give them advantages of better health.


To read more on genetic averages and understand more about this, here are some articles of interest:



Discover Magazine - What Average Genetic Variation Can Tell Us Or Not 
The Mail Online: Brits Believe Mixed Race People Are The Most Attractive And Successful
Psychology Today: Mixed Race: Pretty Face?

What do you think about this theory of genetic averages? Do you agree that mixed race individuals tend to be more attractive? I've love to hear your feedback.


Cosmetic Medicine, MD


Dr. Liow Tiong Sin is an aesthetic practitioner who practices in Kuala Lumpur and Melaka, Malaysia. He has more than 12 years of expertise with non-surgical cosmetic treatments, and  conducts training courses for other doctors from all around Asia. To connect with Dr. Liow, Like Cosmedmd's Facebook page. medical centre website or email