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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Why We're Spending So Much on Botox, Makeup and Facelifts



Why We’re Spending So Much on Botox, Makeup and Facelifts


Last year, Americans spent more on products and procedures to make our faces look better. The reason? Well, it may seem counterintuitive, but experts say the lackluster economy is part of the reason for our collective vanity. 
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) says that while total cosmetic surgeries fell by 2% last year, the number of what they call “minimally invasive” procedures rose by 6%. The most popular of these were Botox and Dysport (the brand names for botulinum toxin) injections, followed by soft tissue filler injections, chemical peels, laser hair removal, and microdermabrasion.
In 2011, the number of both surgeries and minimally invasive procedures rose, although the uptick in more expensive operations was the smaller increase of the two.
“Facial rejuvenation procedures, both surgical and minimally-invasive, experienced the most growth in 2012,” an ASPS press release states. That includes a record-high 6.1 million botulinum toxin injections to freeze our frown lines and crows’ feet. And although the overall number of surgeries fell, the ASPS says demand for facelifts and eyelid surgeries rose 6% and 4%, respectively.
The so-called “lipstick effect” is something consumer psychologists trot out as soon as the economy heads south: The theory goes that we cut back on big-ticket spending, but buy ourselves little indulgences as consolation prizes. Instead of buying a new suit, for example, maybe we’ll buy that designer’s cologne. Instead of a pair of pricey pumps, we’ll settle for the aforementioned lipstick. Or, in this case, we’ll get Botox instead of a pricier nose job or tummy tuck. Maybe we can start calling it the “injection effect” instead.
Unsurprisingly, wealthier Americans seem more willing to keep spending in order to look good. A new survey by Unity Marketing, which examines the spending patterns of affluent Americans, found that the rich are becoming more cautious and keeping those platinum cards in their wallets. But president Pam Danzinger says there are a few spending category outliers.
For instance, spending on beauty services increased a whopping 26.5% last quarter, “one of the top growth categories in the fourth quarter,” Danzinger says in a report accompanying the survey. “Luxury consumers spent more on spa/salon beauty services in the fourth quarter, showing they are still willing to invest to keep up appearances.”
The same trend can be seen at the makeup counter, too. Last year, we spent 10% more on department store brand skincare products, and 7% more on department store makeup, according to market research firm NPD Group. “We have a clientele that’s engaged and wants to buy,” says Karen Grant, global industry analyst for beauty.
All this stuff that we use to make ourselves look good supposedly has a byproduct effect of making us feel good, too. “The reason we hear most is, ‘I’ll continue to buy beauty because it makes me feel better about myself’… This driver is more pronounced in the prestige category,” Grant says. “There’s a more emotional reason than purely logical.”
The willingness to spend at the upper edge of the price spectrum is even more pronounced, Grant says — and it’s not just wealthy Americans dropping big bucks on eye creams and eau de toilettes. People are buying these little luxuries whether they can easily afford them or not, she says. “They’ll find the means at the expense of other things.”
“It’s very much an investment. In some cases, you’re talking about $300 gift sets and things like that,” Grant says.
There’s some indication that for some of us, this spending could be an investment in our careers — or our love lives.
In 2011, Daniel S. Hamermesh, a professor of economics at the University of Texas, Austin and author of the author of Beauty Pays, wrote an opinion piece for the New York Times spelling out just how much your looks matter in the workplace:
One study showed that an American worker who was among the bottom one-seventh in looks, as assessed by randomly chosen observers, earned 10 to 15 percent less per year than a similar worker whose looks were assessed in the top one-third — a lifetime difference, in a typical case, of about $230,000.
In an older, equally depressing paper, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis cited Hamermesh’s research that an unattractive worker’s “plainness penalty” is 9%, and that there’s a 5% “beauty premium” that benefits the pretty and handsome at work.
In 2010, the Chicago Tribune noted that older workers aren’t just relying on their experience to get ahead in the workplace: They’re increasingly trying to turn back the clock with procedures like eye lifts, teeth whitening and hair-loss treatments. “While most older job-seekers know the importance of keeping their skills current, some are applying that same advice to their faces,” the article stated.
Some recent research also suggests that increased beauty spending is an investment in our romantic futures, particularly for women. In a paper published last year, Sarah Hill, assistant professor of social psychology at Texas Christian University, wrote that recessions make women work harder to try to attract men, and prompt a surge in spending on beauty and cosmetic products and services.
The basic idea is that recessions create a scarcity of financially stable men, so women compete more aggressively for a smaller number of successful, well-to-do bachelors. In experiments, Hill found that female subjects conditioned to think about a bad economy were more likely to display a preference for buying items that could enhance their physical appearance.
“Consumers may prioritize beauty during times of economic turmoil,” she wrote.


Read more: http://business.time.com/2013/02/27/why-were-spending-so-much-on-botox-makeup-and-facelifts/#ixzz2OoRqPnKs

Read more: http://business.time.com/2013/02/27/why-were-spending-so-much-on-botox-makeup-and-facelifts/#ixzz2OoRe9gv7


Contact: Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Monday, January 14, 2013

Dermal fillers: Avoid too much of a good thing

If you’re thinking about getting dermal fillers, such as Restylane, you probably want to look like yourself, only better, and avoid looking fake and overfilled.

In the 80s and 90s plastic surgery sometimes produced a pulled-tight surgical look. Then along came the ‘liquid facelift,’ which did the opposite. Injections of dermal fillers are now used to enhance cheekbones, jawlines and lips. But instead of subtly-enhancing features, many women receive too much filler and become puffy and swollen-looking.

Injecting dermal fillers takes anatomical understanding, years of experience and an artistic sense. Practitioners with these skills, usually board-certified plastic surgeons or dermatologists, can now also be found reversing too much of a good thing. Women come to them to undo the effects of too much filler - cheeks that are too round and lips that are too full. To reverse these effects, doctors inject enzymes like hyaluronidase, which can break down or deflate dermal fillers such as Restylane, Juvederm and Perlane.
According to the January issue of Marie Claire, the year 2013 will usher in a subtler more conservative use of fillers. The article points to icons such as Diane Keaton, Lauren Hutton and Meryl Streep. In these women, you can’t tell whether or not they’ve had work done. They look great, like themselves, and not like they’re trying to pass for 30. Marie Claire interviewed a prominent NYC plastic surgeon who recommends going to a cosmetic surgery consultation armed with photos of
yourself throughout the years, so your doctor can see the original shape of your face and how it has aged.

Before picking up the Restylane syringe, good plastic surgeons look at you long and hard evaluating your 1) skin quality and texture, 2) tissue tone and thickness, 3) cheek and lip volume, 4) bone structure and 5) how your face looks when animated and how it looks when still.

An experienced, knowledgeable injector will avoid pitfalls such as these: adding volume to deep set eyes can recess the eyes further and make them look smaller; overinflating nasolabial folds and marionette lines can take away midface structure; and overfilling cheeks can make the under-eye area appear hollow.

If you’re considering dermal fillers, put yourself in the hands of a board-certified plastic surgeon and proceed slowly instead of doing everything at once.


Read the original post: Dermal fillers: Avoid too much of a good thing

 
Contact:Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Friday, November 9, 2012

We are Currently Offering 18 Months Zero Interest Financing on Surgeries*

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Currently Offering 18 Months 
Zero Interest Financing on Surgeries*

Our plastic surgery procedures are more affordable than many realize. Still, we understand that upfront cash payments may not be possible for everyone. However, we also believe that financial considerations should not be an obstacle to obtaining plastic surgery procedures. 

That is why we proudly offer Care Credit, which offers Easy Financing for cosmetic surgery procedures. CareCredit can help you move forward with getting the procedure you've always wanted. With convenient monthly payment options, no up-front costs, no prepayment penalties and no annual fees, it is one of the best choices when it comes to cosmetic surgery financing.

Click Here to apply for financing

For patients who prefer to use credit cards, 
we accept VISA and MasterCard.
 
 *For qualified members
 
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Contact: Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Can breast implants improve your sex life?


(Via- Surgery.org)

Can breast implants improve your sex life?


Most women, at one time or another, wonder what it would be like to have 
breast implants. Realself.com went one better. They asked, “Do breast implants improve a woman’s sex life?” To get answers, they took a survey of women who had breast implants or lifts. Here is what they found:
• Sixty-one percent of respondents said they now have sex more frequently following their breastplastic surgery. Only seven percent claim to have fewer sexual encounters.
• Seventy percent of respondents said their overall sex life satisfaction improved after breast plastic surgery.
• On a scale of one to ten, 28 percent of women who had breast enhancement say their sex life satisfaction improved by more than four points.
• Seven-and-a-half out of every ten women said their breast enhancements were worth it.
Could these results be based on increased self- confidence following implant surgery? The Huffington Post, looking at the survey, commented, “It may be impossible to prove that the surgeries themselves were responsible for women’s increased sexual pleasure, but we suspect the confidence boost that patients receive has much to do with it.”
RealSelf has a “worth it” rating for plastic surgery procedures that reflects combined opinions of thousands of RealSelf community members. Each member rates whether an elective surgery or treatment was “worth it,” all things considered. These ratings are expressed as a percentage; for example, an 80 percent worth it rating means eight out of ten patients would do it again. The “worth it” rating for breast augmentation in 2011 was 84.5 percent; forbreast lift, it was 82 percent.
There is no denying the upswing in breast augmentation. According to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, there were 316,848 breast augmentation performed in the United States in 2011 compared with 101,176 such procedures in 1997.

Can breast implants improve your sex life?




Contact:Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Can you Guess the Most Requested Celebrity Nose?




Contact: Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Monday, September 24, 2012

We've Shaved Our Prices on Hair Removal!

Vartany.com  |   Rita@Vartany.com   |  818.500.0823
We've Reduced Our Prices On Laser Hair Removal!
Take advantage of our new lower pricing 
and book your appointment today!
 
$100 for 15 minute session 
(areas that can be covered within 15 minutes):
 
Women:            
Underarm, Bikini, Mid line;
or Abdomen, Underarm with Forearm, Bikini; 
or Lower Back, Buttocks, Full Face
 
Men
Nostril, Ears, Anterior and Posterior Neck, Cheeks and Underarms

Individual Areas:
Upper lip/Chin          $25
Underarms$25
Bikini                                    $40
Underarm and Bikini$50
Anterior/Posterior Neck: $50

Larger Areas:
Full Back or Chest for men: $200
Lower Legs:$200
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Contact: Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com

Monday, August 13, 2012

Kim Kardashian Flaunts Her Killer Curves in Hawaii


(Courtesy E!) NEWS/

Kim Kardashian Flaunts Her Killer Curves in Hawaii


Kim KardashianInstagram
To call Kim Kardashian a beach babe is definitely an understatement.
While vacationing in Hawaii with her main squeeze, Kanye West, the E! star graciously took a moment yesterday to show off her killer curves by posting this Instagram pic.
While sporting a sexy, formfitting black bathing suit, Kim clearly appears to be enjoying her time in the surf and sand.
"Happy Sunday," she captioned the photo.
Of course, for all of you seeing this for the first time now, it's certainly a happy Monday as well.
Catch new episodes of Keeping Up With the Kardashians on Sundays at 9/8 c only on E!





Contact: Dr. Armen Vartany, Board Certified Plastic Surgeon 1510 South Central Avenue, Ste 620, Glendale, CA 91204-2598 (818) 500-0823 ‎ Vartany.com