Quote from: icy on February 10, 2017, 01:27:06 AMI tried to consult with many surgeons about my nose and they do not like that nose so that is why I am possibly going to stick with Doctor Z.
There's one thing I don't like about that nose -- it's flatly broad at the bridge. The curvature is lovely, but most noses get narrower at the bridge instead of wider. That flat wideness is actually an aesthetic I've seen in a lot of Dr O noses, and I think it just looks kind of funny, unnatural.
Speaking of Doctor O, my impression is that Deschamps-Braly, who took over Dr O's practice in San Francisco, can be every bit as "aggressive" as Dr Z. In fact, I think most facial surgeons can and will be aggressive... if that's what the patient wants (and, likewise, they can go more conservative if that's what the patient wants). Deschamps-Braly, however, can do Type III foreheads.
So in terms of choosing doctors for their aesthetics, I'd make that more of a priority only if you're not precisely clear on the aesthetics you're looking for in the first place.
By the same token, though, being precisely clear on your aesthetics doesn't mean your sense of aesthetics is actually
good -- meaning, you might not actually like the gestalt effect of certain individual choices once they're in place. One might have a "be aggressive as possible" approach in mind, but that doesn't necessarily mean that, say, a maximal scalp advancement is going to look good on you based on your facial proportions. And there are some areas where there are limits to how far you can go -- like, with jaw recontouring, you might not be able to go as far as you want because of where the mental nerve (that innervates chin) lies, as it travels through a "mandibular canal" that shouldn't be breached. This, in turn, might need to inform other aesthetic choices so that the gestalt of your face "makes sense." In my opinion, proportions and balance matter a lot more than we tend to realize at first glance.