Upper Blepharoplasty
Cosmetic
Blepharoplasty The Art of the Eyelid
The eyes are the most defining feature of the face — and the first to betray the passage of time. Excess skin, displaced fat, and weakened muscle can create an appearance of fatigue, heaviness, or age that no longer reflects how you feel. Blepharoplasty, performed by a fellowship-trained oculoplastic surgeon, goes far beyond simple skin removal. It is a precise architectural restoration of the eyelid — one that requires an intimate understanding of anatomy, aesthetics, and the delicate mechanics of how the eye moves, closes, and sees.


Before
What Sets Our Approach Apart
Most surgeons treat blepharoplasty as a straightforward excision of skin and fat. It is not. True eyelid surgery demands the ability to reposition rather than simply remove fat, recreate a natural lid fold and crease, identify and correct underlying ptosis, address laxity at the outer corner of the eye, and understand what a beautiful, natural eyelid actually looks like — across every age, ethnicity, and facial structure.
What Blepharoplasty Can Address:
Overhanging upper eyelid skin causing heaviness or vision obstruction
Puffy upper or lower eyelid fat pads
Under-eye bags and hollowing
Drooping of the upper eyelid muscle (ptosis)
Laxity or looseness at the outer corner of the eye
Asymmetry between the upper or lower lids
What to Expect
Blepharoplasty is performed on an outpatient basis, typically under local anesthesia with sedation. Incisions are placed within the natural crease of the eyelid, leaving no visible scarring. Most patients return to normal activity within two weeks
