Pre-treatment
Baseline
Baseline motion shows the under-eye bags, hollowing, and tear-trough shadowing before surgery.
EyeFACE Institute · Selected Cases
Selected EyeFACE examples showing how eyelid and facial surgery are planned around anatomy, movement, healing, and natural identity. Each case is included to illustrate a specific decision point rather than a generic transformation.
Surgical results are individual. Your consultation determines which approach, if any, fits your anatomy, goals, and safety profile.
Case 003 · Upper OFA-Bleph™
Upper eyelid surgery focused on brow-lid balance, eyelid platform, and natural eye shape
This focused periocular view highlights the upper eyelid platform, brow-lid balance, and natural eye shape without relying on a broader facial change.
Frontal periocular view


Right oblique periocular view


Left oblique periocular view


What to notice
Individual anatomy, healing, skin quality, movement, and surgical goals vary. Images are educational examples, not testimonials or guarantees of outcome.
Case 001 · Lower OFA-Bleph™
Lower eyelid surgery for under-eye bags, hollowing, and lid-cheek contour
This case shows how lower eyelid fat repositioning can soften under-eye bags, hollowing, dark-circle shadowing, and the lid-cheek transition while preserving natural facial movement.
Frontal view


Right oblique view


Left oblique view


What to notice
Individual anatomy, healing, skin quality, movement, and surgical goals vary. Images are educational examples, not testimonials or guarantees of outcome.
Video Timeline
This lower OFA-Bleph™ case focuses on the baseline and mature 8.5-month result so patients can see the final contour and natural movement clearly.
Pre-treatment
Baseline motion shows the under-eye bags, hollowing, and tear-trough shadowing before surgery.
Post-treatment
More mature lower-eyelid and lid-cheek contour with preserved natural movement.
Case 002 · Four-Lid OFA-Bleph™ + Ptosis Repair + RERF-M
Upper and lower eyelid surgery, ptosis repair, and endoscopic midface support
This hairline-to-chin view shows how upper eyelid, lower eyelid, eyelid-opening, and midface planning can work together when the concern is not limited to the eyelids alone.
Frontal hairline-to-chin view


Oblique hairline-to-chin view


What to notice
Individual anatomy, healing, skin quality, movement, and surgical goals vary. Images are educational examples, not testimonials or guarantees of outcome.
RERF-M Video
This four-lid OFA-Bleph™ + ptosis repair + RERF-M sequence uses a tighter hairline-to-chin crop so the video shows facial support, eyelid opening, and midface movement without drifting into excess neck or room context.
Pre-treatment
Baseline motion shows the eyelid, midface, and lower-face support pattern before surgery.
Post-treatment
The 5-month clip shows the eyelid-opening, lower-eyelid, and midface changes in natural movement.
How to Read These Results
These examples are meant to help you see the relationship between eyelid anatomy, facial support, healing, and the surrounding skin. The right plan may involve eyelid surgery alone, a broader facial approach, staged care, or no procedure at all.
Learn about lower eyelid surgery →Patient permission
Examples are used only when the public education context is appropriate.
Respectful crops
The image area is chosen to show the anatomy without adding unnecessary exposure.
Clinical context
Each case is paired with the planning point it is meant to teach.
Current gallery
3 selected cases
Planning focus
OFA-Bleph™ + RERF-M
In consultation
More context when relevant
Case category
Upper eyelid platform, crease design, brow-lid balance, and tissue preservation.
Case category
Under-eye bags, hollows, dark-circle shadowing, fat repositioning, and lid-cheek contour.
Case category
Upper and lower eyelid balance with preservation of natural eye identity.
Case category
Midface support and the lower eyelid-cheek transition when eyelid surgery alone is incomplete.
Case category
Crease design, eyelid platform, ptosis assessment, and anatomy-respecting planning.
View Related Page →Case category
A look inside energy-based skin treatment planning, safety setup, and recovery support.
View Related Page →Consultation Review
During consultation, Dr. Gill can place relevant examples in a more complete clinical context: anatomy, eye health, surgical planning, healing, and whether an eyelid, RERF®, RERF-Sculpt™, or EyeFACE Advanced Skin™ plan makes sense.
Not ready to choose a consultation yet? Begin through our secure patient portal so our team can review your goals and photos before recommending the right next step.
A treatment plan is confirmed after the appropriate review, clinical consultation, and care planning.
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