Sunday, October 7, 2012

Chelsea Clinton

 
 


 A lot has been written lately about Chelsea Clinton and her recent wedding. The dresses, the schedule, the expense, the choreography of the wedding dance. All the little details our celebrity obsessed public thrives on and the media is happy to dish out 24 hours a day.
There’s also been commentary about possible plastic surgery. Indeed if you look at photos of her growing up you can see that there are some changes.
Most noticeably she seems to have had a chin implant and a correction of her somewhat gummy smile, probably with Botox.
So what’s the big deal? The media are always obsessed with celebrity plastic surgery. Mostly they discuss which celebrity is getting what plastic surgery and whether it is good, bad or ugly. In some cases, when it is good plastic surgery or you can’t quite tell whether the celebrity has had a nip/tuck or not and what they might be doing to maintain or enhance their appearance.
But for the vast number of people in the United States that have plastic surgery it’s not about beautiful people getting more beautiful or going to extreme lengths with plastic surgery in a desperate attempt to get that next big roll. It’s more often about people who just have a few details about their body or face that they’d like to change in an effort to be a little more confident about their physical appearance. One way to look at it is that we sort of work from the impression that there is a bell curve of appearance. We all want to be inside the bell curve ideally as far to the right of the top as possible, but most of us understand that that position is occupied by a few actors, actresses, supermodels and genetically blessed people. For the rest of us were content to be within two standard deviations of normal, whatever that is. The fact is that our brains are programmed to recognize attractiveness and symmetry as part of our genetic programming to search for a healthy mate. There is a correlation between attractiveness, health and lack of genetic diseases. So therefore we are programmed to recognize beauty and attractiveness, and instinctively know what falls within the bell curve. At the same time, we tend to assess our own placement on that bell curve and we often have little things that we consider changing in order to move ourselves just a little bit more toward the right. Now this can be complicated by various psychological issues of self-doubt or self worth but for most of us, we see ourselves fairly realistically and can make rational decisions about what plastic surgery might offer us.
Chelsea Clinton as a Teenager
Chelsea Clinton, as a teen, had a few challenges with her features and tended to look a bit awkward. Many teens experience an awkward phase as their features mature on the way to adulthood. As she has grown up and matured her looks  improved but she still had a receding chin and a rather “gummy” smile. With the plastic surgery that was performed, she successfully moved herself a standard deviation in the right direction of the bell curve. Her features look much more proportional and most would agree that she looked very pretty in her wedding photos.

So what does this have to do with the big picture? One of my staff members recently told me that before she started working for me she thought that plastic surgery was about bringing in a photo of your favorite movie star and having the surgeon make you look like that. That is absolutely not what plastic surgery is about. Plastic surgery is about restoring or improving balance, symmetry and aesthetic beauty. Like Chelsea Clinton, it is about fixing just a few of those little things that tend to make a positive difference. It’s about optimizing the attractive features that you have and balancing the rest. That is good plastic surgery. It worked for Chelsea Clinton!

Chelsea Clinton Plastic Surgery Rumors: Did She, or Didn't She?
Did Chelsea Clinton have plastic surgery to become the stunning bride we saw tonight at the posh Astor Courts Estate wedding? Some speculate it has taken Chelsea Clinton plastic surgery (photos below), extensive orthodontic work and plenty of dieting to get in the fabulous shape she's in now. As we watched the former first daughter grow up, we have to admit: though she was always cute, we did see her go through a physically-awkward period from about ages 12-20.

Let the record state: the beautiful woman who walked down the aisle tonight was anything but awkward. See Chelsea Clinton 'plastic surgery photos' and spin class video linked below, but see the brand new Chelsea Clinton wedding pictures right here in this spectacular slideshow!)

Chelsea Clinton Plastic Surgery: Photos Show Possible Proof Of Transformation.

Sources for Examiner's Celebrity Health and Fitness Examiner say Chelsea Clinton slimmed down through a sometimes twice-daily regimen of hour-long spin classes, which are "intense cardio workouts" performed on stationary bikes. This Examiner article (with video of the former first daughter leaving spin class in NYC) says spinning can burn up to 500 calories an hour! If that's the case, it likely didn't take Chelsea Clinton any plastic surgery to get that body she rocked in her Vera Wang wedding dress tonight!

However, in this series of so-called Chelsea Clinton 'plastic surgery photos', you can almost see the transformation unfolding before your very eyes. The orthodontics are clear; her teeth are straighter, whiter and her gums are less noticeable. It also appears, and the article quotes a medical professional as agreeing, that there may be a bit of bonafide Chelsea Clinton plastic surgery going on in the facial region. Though her body is built by God and hard work, her nose and chin appear to have been sculpted by the hands of a doctor.

You can see the possible Chelsea Clinton plastic surgery photos here. What do you think? Did Chelsea get a nose job? Does it really even matter if Chelsea Clinton got plastic surgery to improve her looks?

Who thinks Chelsea Clinton had plastic surgery?
All those who made fun of the President's daughter during the Clinton administration are eating their words now! It seems as if Chelsea Clinton got a make-over perhaps a rhinoplasty and chin augmentation. Chelsea introduced "my mother and my hero" on Monday night at the Democratic National Convention. She looks great with her new look. She straightened and lightened her hair and lost her gummy smile. Dermal fillers such as Restylane and Juvederm can help disguise a gummy smile by plumping up the top lip. She may have had help from her dentist as well.

The rhinoplasty procedure can improve and refine the aesthetics of your nose with surgical techniques that improve a drooping tip, a bulbous tip or a dorsal bump. It also can narrow the bridge of the nose when osteotomies (or breaking the bones) are done. A septoplasty can correct and improve breathing problems which are caused by a condition known as a deviated septum. Chin augmentation is a small change that makes a world of difference. These procedures have helped Chelsea Clinton improve her look and most likely give her more confidence than ever! Now it's Hillary's turn...
Chelsea Clinton's Amazing Plastic Surgery Transformation.
As her July 31 dream wedding approaches, Chelsea Clinton has been photographed around her downtown Manhattan neighborhood looking fitter and prettier than ever, thanks to strict dieting, exercise and plastic surgery.
Chelsea, 30, is determined to be a beautiful bride, and has been hitting the gym every day this week near her trendy Gramercy pad.

But the former First Daughter has also had some cosmetic enhancements, including a nose job and possible chin augmentation, according to Dr. Jennifer Walden, a Manhattan plastic surgeon who has not treated Clinton.
“It looks as if she has undergone a rhinoplasty procedure (nose job) which was nicely and conservatively done to remove the bump from the bridge of the nose, slim the nasal bones, as well as refine and rotate the tip which also appears to be less droopy,” Walden told MakeMeHeal.
To even out her weak chin, “she also has likely had chin augmentation, or a chin implant, placed to give her stronger jawline and more aesthetic proportions to her lower face.”

Now that she’s looking better, Chelsea is insisting that her dad, former President Bill Clinton, also overhaul his look.

“She doesn’t think I’m in shape,” Bill, 63, at the Pete Peterson Foundation‘s Fiscal Summit in Washington, D.C. Chelsea told him he’s “gotta look good” if he wants to walk her down the aisle.

Clinton recounts: “I said, ‘Well, what’s your definition?’ And she said, ‘Oh, about 15 pounds.’ So how’s Bill wedding weight-loss plan going? “I’m halfway home,” he says.
Meanwhile, the sleepy little town of Rhinebeck, N.Y., is feverishly making preparations for what many are calling “The Wedding of the Decade.”

Clintons Spare No Expense For Wedding of Their Only Child

Because there’s no monarchy in the U.S., Chelsea and her superstar political parents are the closest Americans have to royalty.

Has Chelsea Clinton Had Plastic Surgery?

Every bride wants the perfect body on her perfect day. The sudden pre-wedding fitness frenzy does not exclude First Daughters.

Like countless brides before her, Chelsea Clinton (born February 27, 1980) had a specific goal in mind during the months leading up to her summer wedding in 2010.

The only daughter of former president Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently became a full-time correspondent for NBC.

After years helping to promote the political work of her parents and furthering her business education, Chelsea will be stepping up as a correspondent on the nightly news.
Chelsea’s Plastic Surgery Makeover?

Countless brides delve into crash diets and hardcore workouts in hopes they will fit into the wedding dress in the size of their dreams. Some have the discipline to succeed while others crash and burn.

Chelsea Clinton began her own makeover transformation when she became engaged to investment banker Marc Mezvinsky in 2009 over Thanksgiving weekend.

Her regimen included diet, exercise, and eventually a little celebrity surgery.

What Made Chelsea’s Cosmetic Surgery Successful?

Chelsea and Marc’s wedding day, the First Daughter had slimmed down by 25 pounds and emerged with a sleeker nose and more defined jaw line.

Fortunately, these cosmetic enhancements turned out the way plastic surgery always should.

Rather than radical and unnatural transformations, Chelsea’s celebrity plastic surgery – including nose job and chin augmentation – were minor procedures resulting in major success.

The rhinoplasty simply smoothed out a bump from the bridge of her nose and the chin work defined the jaw line a bit more. Dr. Jennifer Walden, a plastic surgeon, estimates that Clinton also underwent dental work and received Juvederm – a dermal filler – to disguise her “gummy” smile.
On Dr. Walden’s celebrity blog (Plastic Surgery Celebrity) she explains that the filler served to plump the top lip, transforming Clinton’s smile and redefining her face.

Clinton had the good fortune of averting a bad cosmetic surgery experience by opting to go light and natural. In contrast to cases like Kate Gosselin and Daryl Hannah, which have completely altered the celebrities’ faces making them nearly unrecognizable, Chelsea is clearly a better version of herself.

Everyone, including those in plastic surgery, acknowledges the former First Daughter’s elegant transformation.
 
Dr. David Shafer, a plastic surgeon in New York, has commented on her improving looks over the years – an accomplishment all strive for but few successfully achieve.

As a result, Chelsea became happier after her transformation as she prepared to begin the newest chapter in her life.

The three made over areas the nose, chin, and smile in combination with weight loss and a new hairstyle refined Chelsea’s look and transformed her into a sleek bride ready to shine on her special day.

With successful weight loss and Chelsea Clinton plastic surgery, she boosted her confidence to walk down the aisle last year.

Thanks to her hard work and tasteful selections, Chelsea’s new career and marriage are off to a beautiful and confident beginning.

No comments:

Post a Comment