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Does My Sister Have High Cheekbones *pictures Included

How do I get a more-defined jawline and cheekbones? What exercises help to build a more visible jawline and/or cheekbones, or is it just eating healthier in general?

Three things define a perfect jawlineA great v shaped jawDouble chinLess fat in cheeksGetting a v shaped jaw is entirely based on genetics, in order to get a chiseled jawline you ought to do some facial exercises, it's pretty easy though…Do these regularlyReduce your sodium intake first, I feel somewhat uncomfortable when I take salty foods, you can just feel in your muscles.Most men are mouth breathers, if you breathe in your mouth your jaw muscles becomes loose which won't give a perfect jawline. Your jaw muscles must be tight and strong to a obtain a shape so better close ur mouth and don't breath through mouth.The final thing is you have to work out and sweat to lose your cheek fat. Yeah it's necessary to maintain your body fat and avoid oily and fatty foods ( but take healthy fats since it helps to develop a manly body).Drink more water be hydrated enough, it not only helps your skin but it reduces the sodium content in your blood. Facial exercises :Rotate your jaw as far as possible, it streches your cheek muscles makes it tight.Smile, yeah it helps. Smile such that you show your entire teeth. ( do in bathroom because people may think you are crazy) do atleast 10 times in the morning.Try to touch your nose with your tongue ( sounds silly but it helps to elongate the lower jaw muscles and giving it an amazing shape)Chew gum regularlyThere are some other tips too ( these helps to look better even though you don't have a perfect jaw)1. Get a beard, not a long one.. It should be trimmed perfectly and it helps to make your face look longer.2. Add volume to your hair.. If you make your hair up straight.. It looks good even though you have round face cut.

Do your cheekbones become more prominent with age?

I'm 16, and over the past two years, I've lost my chubby cheeks and my face has become narrower. I've also noticed that recently, my cheekbones look slightly more prominent. So, could they become more raised and noticeable as I get older?

High cheekbones shadows? (native blood)?

okay so i have high cheekbones, and i always seem to look haggard because i get these shadows under them. especially in pictures. i'm not over weight or anything, but the shadows are started to make me feel self concious.
i'm 1/4 native american (mostly cherokee and blackfoot, some sioux) on my mother's side, so i;m assuming i get my cheekbones and my nose from that bloodline.
but is there anything i can do about the shadows, or just learn to live with them and embrace it?

>>>>
please don't attack me for saying i'm 'part' native american. i'm only saying it for background on my facial features, i'm not claiming to be and actually native american, as my family has no living ties to native americans. i'm not be racist, i'm not be offensive. i am saying what i am.
>>>>

oh, and i'm also 1/4 swiss on my daddy's side (if that makes a difference) but i only got lighter hair from that, so i think i take after my mama more, but my brother and sister take after him more, they have light, almost oinkish, complexions with blue eyes and darker hair, where i'm olive with goldish hair (ash blondish) with eyes that switch bwteen brown to dark green.

but back to my question, shadows under my cheeks?

thanks!

How accurate is the website Pink Mirror in determining someone's physical attractiveness (I'm pretty self-conscious about my appearance but scored 8.4 out of 10)?

I looked Pink Mirror up, and I can say without question that site is not a healthy solution for men or women who may have little or issues with their perceived physical appearance.First, you SHOULD NOT based your physical self-worth based on a website, any site.Second, you should not base your physical self-worth on a rating system at all. Specially one online. As a photographer I can tell you that you are literally seeding insecurities within yourself. Since you know, those photos are not the real you. Just touched up versions of photos of you and as again, as photographer, they are not very well done either. They are touching them up but I noticed they made that Asian lady’s eyes bigger. You know the one, on the frontpage, which I uploaded here.Your self worth comes from within you. Yes, cliche as heck. But it is cliche because it is true. Work on your physique and also on your mental acceptance of yourself and if you NEED to ask people about your looks, then ask people whose opinion you actually trust and not strangers online.For your own sanity. Do this.Having other people rate you like a piece of meat can be a fun, stupid and silly time waster, but obviously this is not what *you* are getting out of it. You are trying to build your physical attractiveness and self worth through fake photos. Yeah, that is never going to lead you to a mentally healthy place… at all, specially in the long run. Since all you will need is some trolls to utterly make you question yourself.Please don’t use sites like those for the reasons you are thinking.

Is it normal I think Gigi Hadid is not pretty even though she is quite a successful model?

The Hadid sisters, with lighting from high, accentuating cheekbones and elongating face and a telephoto lens:Grace Kelly - with similar lighting and telephoto lens:Ms. Kelly’s granddaughter, Charlotte Casarighi (NOT a model)The two Hadid girls look pretty but you don’t expect them to be approachable or generous. Compare that to Grace Kelly, who, even in her most serious poses, exudes grace, beauty and kindness. Even Charlotte, Ms Kelly’s granddaughter, exudes grace, approachability and sensuous empathy - something the Hadids don’t. She is also an accomplished equestrian and academically intelligent, currently working as a journalist; she is someone who can hold her own in conversation.I see your point, Ms Hadid is pretty but she is not drop dead “gorgeous” so she got to where she is by virtue of the the advantages of a having a very rich father like her sister, Bella, and their brother, Anwar. All of the siblings are good-looking in their own way but certainly not “drop dead gorgeous” whose looks would have guaranteed them fame as models in the absence of money and connections of their parents.Mohamed Hadid (69) her dad, Palestinian, is uber rich and her mom, Yolanda van den Herik, a blond Dutchwoman, was a model who was married for her looks by a rich guy at age 16 years her senior, divorced, hitched up with another rich guy, David Foster (music producer), 15 years her senior and soon divorced him, then changed her last name back to “Hadid” most probably as it was more usefully “famous” than either Foster or van den Herik.The little I’ve seen of videos of the sisters, they are personalties with nothing original to say and not particularly kind, stereotypical self-absorbed rich children with little concept of the lives of most people.As they say, when you’re young, you have the looks you inherited, when you’re old, you have the looks from the manner you lived.

My possible half brother doesn't look like me?

I found him recently, and we are still waiting to get a DNA test to confirm it. All this time I've been looking at his pictures and feeling really depressed because he doesn't look like me.

He was born blonde although now his hair has darkened to brown. He has blue eyes, thin lips and a defined nose. His profile sometimes looks slightly Native American. Another thing I know is that he has Gilbert's syndrome so his skin (originally pale) looks yellowish. He is 1,78 and is 7 years older than me. He could pass for European, Polish maybe.

I have almost jet black hair, really dark eyes, full red lips, flat nose, high cheekbones,and and epicanthic fold. People in my own country think I'm Asian but I'm part Native American. My skin is not red nor brown, it's between light olive and yellow. I'm 1,68 m.

Some medical reports of my biological mother say that she had dark hair, hazel eyes, and was 1,65. I also saw a picture from a possible aunt (my mother's sister) and her skin looked olive. I could easily notice that she had some Native American features.

Do you know anyone who doesn't look like their half sibling? And is it possible that he is my sibling although he has wide blue eyes and no epicanthic fold? I look really Native American.

Thanks in advance.

What does Edward Cullen look like.....?

Hair: tousled bronze (reddish-brown). Bella describes it as his most human quality in the sun.
Eyes: Liquid topaz when he is well fed, http://aussiesapphire.files.wordpress.co...
and 'flat black' when he is hungry or angry, with purplish almost bruise like circles under his eyes...they lighten and almost disappear when he has fed. Long, black lashes.
Face: Perfectly sculpted, like the rest of his body. High cheekbones, straight nose, perfect full lips with razor sharp, straight, white teeth. Always flashing his crooked smile to get what he wants.
Skin: Often described as looking like a stone carving or statue, perfectly smooth, alabaster white, rock hard. Bella's own 'personal god'. Shimmers like a crystal in the sunlight, throwing millions of rainbows everywhere.
Body: Not as muscular as his brother Emmett, more boyish, but lean and strong..and not without muscles of his own.
Dress: Subdued colors, khakis, whites, blacks. Always 'perfect'.
Some good pictures to go along with the description:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3232/2367...
http://www.collider.com/uploads/imageGal...
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3252/2735967407_c631e67d08.jpg?v=0
http://www.kaziahodges.com/images/Edward_Cullen.jpg

Hope you get what you need from this:)

Is the image we see in the mirror what everyone else sees?

I know exactly what you mean. I usually look horrible in pictures, whereas when I look at my reflection in the mirror I can find something that I like about my physical appearance.

I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that when you look at yourself in the mirror, you're in control of what you see. If your face is contorted in an unflattering expression, you can alter that expression however it pleases you. If light plays on your face in a way that it unfavorably displays any facial blemishes or perceptible physical flaws, you can alter the lighting or the angle of your face so that only what you want to see is displayed. If your hair isn't arranged just right, you can arrange it so that it best accentuates your features.

Having your picture taken is a different story. Once that still image is captured, what you see is what you get, save deleting the image from your camera. If you're caught with your mouth or your eyes wide open (you know, that great deer caught in the headlights look), you're stuck with that image unless you do a retake. Pictures sometimes capture us in fine form, but all too often capture us when we are looking less than our best.

Is the image we see in the mirror what everyone else sees? Rarely so. We are our own worst critics. Me, the first thing I notice when looking in the mirror is the largeness of my eyes, the scars on my cheeks (courtesy of my sister punching a window in my face 11 years ago), cheeks that--to me--are chubby, and hair that I can never manage. However, I have been told that the first things people see when looking upon me is my long hair that frames my face just right, my deep and expressive brown eyes (I'm told they have a come-hither look!), full lips, and high, prominent cheekbones--evidence of my Native American heritage. The scars that I have looked at for the last 11 years, apparently go unnoticed, unless I point them out. So what I see in the mirror is far different than what I am told other people see when they look at me.

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