JUST like her music, Taylor Swift’s appearance has changed over time – but one pro thinks she’s had a little help.
The beautician pointed out differences in the 34-year-old Karma singer’s face, which he says are signs of a minor problem.
From her country days singing Teardrops on My Guitar to her more emo pop tracks from The Tortured Poets Department, Taylor Swift’s music isn’t the only thing that’s evolved over the years.
Juvly Aesthetics CEO Dr. Justin Harper chronicled the pop princess’s path from injectables over the past decade to her current look.
But he doesn’t recommend that other women use some of the same techniques, citing things that can go wrong.
BABY FACE
Taylor Swift burst onto the entertainment scene in 2007 with shiny blonde curls and a happy smile.
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Dr. Harper admitted that at 18 she looked “very young” for her age.
“She already had these facial folds and it was natural back then,” he said.
Often called smile or laugh lines, nasolabial folds are wrinkles in the skin that extend from both sides of the nose to the corners of the mouth.
Creases can become prominent and permanent with age.
“If you have folds on your face, it’s because the structure of your face was built for folds when you’re young,” said Dr. Harper.
BLONDE LEGEND
Fast forward almost a decade later, Taylor Swift is sporting a sleek platinum blonde bob in 2016.
In her late 20s, she should look noticeably older, but she seemed to have fewer fine lines and wrinkles than she did when she was a teenager.
That’s when Dr. Harper suspects she had extensive fillers.
There is a common theory among many plastic surgeons and beauty professionals that celebrities drastically change their hair to divert attention from the surgical results.
They can add or eliminate bangs, change the color or go for a dramatically short length, and the 12-time Grammy Award winner has done it all.
Her smile lines were virtually nonexistent in a photo Dr. Harper examined in the mid-2010s, even as she tried to smile softly.
He suspects Taylor has nasolabial filler around her mouth, shadow on her chin near the marionette lines, and some filler around her piriform opening, right next to her nose.
Dr. Harper said “it’s not good to make them go away completely.”
“If I had filler trying to smooth it out, even if I’m good, even if I can make the lines disappear, I fundamentally make someone look more stretched out, wider, more cat-like,” he explained.
“You can see how the mouth naturally looks more protruding,” he explained.
Dr. Harper also said there is a “strange flatness” to this.
As a result of the stabilizing padding, he added that she doesn’t look as expressive and “couldn’t smile properly” in photos.
“What you’re doing is adding fill or volume to the area that needs to be animated or expressed, which is important for an artist,” he said.
There’s a reason this is a popular area for cosmetic work, he added.
“This is because people want that filtered look, but smile lines are natural,” Dr. Harper explained.
CURRENT PRINCESS
Now, in the present day, Dr. Harper believes Taylor probably had some filler in her jaw and “more than she would like.”
“You can see the fill in the puppet line,” he added.
Another addition is “some work done to the cheeks,” but “obviously not much.”
She may not have chipmunk cheeks, but the filler subtly lifts her face.
One big difference Dr. Harper noticed was the elevation of the nose because “it’s much narrower at the nasal base.”
“Our nose doesn’t get narrower as we age. It’s usually wider,” he explained.
This story originally appeared on The-sun.com read the full story