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In South Korea, Plastic Surgery Comes Out of the Storage room chi phi tri tan nhang tai thu cuc

SEOUL — With a blue pen, Dr. Seo Young-tae used arches on Chang Hyang-sook’s eyelids, marking where to cut and stitch to create a new fold to make her eyes seem larger and rounder. It is an operation so common below that most ladies on Seoul roads seem to have a dual fold, though just one of every single five Koreans is born with one. tiem tri nam

Connected kinh nghiem tri tan nhang tai thu cuc



Jean Chung for the International Herald Tribune chi phi tri nam tai thu cuc

Chang Hyang-sook, a cosmetics artist, paid the 2.3 million won, or about $2,000, to make her eyes look greater and rounder. quy trinh tri tan nhang tai thu cuc

“Promise you’ll do a great job in my eyes,” Ms. Chang explained to Dr. Seo. “Never mind the pain. I can take it.”

For Ms. Chang, 25, a makeup artist, the 2.3 million won, or about $2,000, eye job is just the finishing touch in a program several months long to remake her face. In the previous two months, Ms. Chang had definitely not only had her the teeth rearranged, but her jaw bone tissues cut and repositioned, for 22 million won. dia chi tri nam uy tin tai ha noi

“You must endure pain to be gorgeous,” she said, adding that an eye job is so routine these days “it’s not even considered surgery.” dia chi tri tan nhang tai ha noi

Cosmetic surgery has long been widespread in South Korea. But until finally recently, it was something to hold quiet about. No longer. tham my vien tri nam uy tin

And as culture has become more open about the practice, surgeries have become increasingly intense. Double-jaw surgery — which was originally developed to restoration facial deformities, and involves cutting and rearranging the upper and lower jaws — has become a favored procedure for South Korean women who are no longer satisfied with mere nose jobs or with paring down cheekbones to accomplish a smoother facial line. o dau ban tan nhang an toan

Celebrities have assisted to drive the tendency, as they scramble to keep ahead of digital technology that mercilessly exposes not only their actual imperfections, but any attempts to remedy them, said Rando Kim, a professor of consumer science at Seoul National University.

“Wide-screen and high-definition TV put pressure on them to appearance good in close-ups,” Mr. Kim said. “And with the Internet, where people like to post ‘before’ and ‘after’ pictures, they can no much longer hide it. So they go public, often talking proudly about it on TV.”

That, in turn, has encouraged greater openness within ordinary South Koreans. cong nghe tri nam tan nhang

“It used to be all hush-hush when mothers brought their daughters in for a face-lift before taking them to match-makers,” said Dr. Park Sang-hoon, head of ID Hospital. “Now youthful ladies go plastic surgery shopping around here.”