Hyaluronic acid allows us to work with volume, projection, and facial balance very precisely. It is not always about adding size. Often its role is to organize proportions and improve transitions between facial areas.
Beyond the lips
Although lips are one of the best-known areas, facial harmonization can also include the chin, cheekbones, folds, or jawline. Each point has a different role within the overall balance.
In some faces the goal is definition. In others, it is support. And in others, it is softening a transition so the face looks more proportionate without an obvious change.
Natural does not mean doing very little
A natural result does not depend only on the amount of product, but on where it is placed and why. Sometimes a small correction in the right area changes much more than a large volume placed without a plan.
That is why good harmonization does not copy a mold. It adapts to each person's anatomy and respects the way they express themselves.
What do we assess before treatment?
We look at profile, chin projection, the relationship between lips and nose, midface support, and facial movement while speaking or smiling. All of this influences the final decision.
Planning also considers style, expectations, and the level of change desired. Some patients want a very soft correction, while others want a more defined but still elegant result.
One tool within a plan
Hyaluronic acid works best as part of a strategy. Sometimes it is the main treatment; other times it supports protocols for firmness, texture, or radiance.
The key is that the final result makes sense with the whole face, not with one isolated area.

