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"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

hannah

im just a pink lemon
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"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift. Lets look at the difference between standard nose thread procedures and the “Cat Whisker” technique.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
Nose-Thread-Lift-02.jpg
IMG_0121.jpg

However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

Screenshot 2025-09-06 152123.png
Screenshot 2025-09-06 191839.png

Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
images.png

Smooth:
ThreadW-mono.webp

While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
Screenshot 2025-09-06 194901.png

The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
Screenshot 2025-09-06 200305.png

Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Screenshot 2025-09-06 200614.png
Screenshot 2025-09-06 200620.png
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
Screenshot 2025-09-06 200858.png
Screenshot 2025-09-06 200927.png

Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
 
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"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
View attachment 172261View attachment 172262
However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

View attachment 172280View attachment 172282
Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
View attachment 172294
Smooth:
View attachment 172297
While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
View attachment 172305
The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
View attachment 172313
Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
View attachment 172317View attachment 172316
Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
Your telling me your gonna try and do this at home?
IMG_1672.jpeg
 
I love how it says most likely painful
 
Your telling me your gonna try and do this at home?
View attachment 172327
yes, although it will be painful its a minimally invasive area! safety wise its not too risky. no downtime or recovery either. i almost have everything i need, still waiting on some things.
I love how it says most likely painful
i will be using lidocaine injections and numbing cream, and id suggest that to anyone who attempts to do it. but that doesnt give any pain free guarantee, and i dont want people to have false hopes or anything!
 
yes, although it will be painful its a minimally invasive area! safety wise its not too risky. no downtime or recovery either. i almost have everything i need, still waiting on some things.

i will be using lidocaine injections and numbing cream, and id suggest that to anyone who attempts to do it. but that doesnt give any pain free guarantee, and i dont want people to have false hopes or anything!
Ok, it seems interesting, good luck hope everything works out and your not harmed
 
Ok, it seems interesting, good luck hope everything works out and your not harmed
thank you!! if i harm myself or botch it i guess the experiment would still be beneficial to users
 
thank you!! if i harm myself or botch it i guess the experiment would still be beneficial to users
Omg pls give an update if it works or not
 
"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
View attachment 172261View attachment 172262
However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

View attachment 172280View attachment 172282
Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
View attachment 172294
Smooth:
View attachment 172297
While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
View attachment 172305
The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
View attachment 172313
Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
View attachment 172317View attachment 172316
Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
interesting thread, mirin

but the procedure looks scare
 
interesting thread, mirin

but the procedure looks scare
i agree, it def looks super scary. that area is sensitive and im expecting it to hurt a lot despite all the pain reducing precautions im taking, but im trying to be low inhib 😅😅😅😅
 
"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift. Lets look at the difference between standard nose thread procedures and the “Cat Whisker” technique.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
View attachment 172261View attachment 172262
However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

View attachment 172280View attachment 172282
Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
View attachment 172294
Smooth:
View attachment 172297
While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
View attachment 172305
The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
View attachment 172313
Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
View attachment 172317View attachment 172316
Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
why is she banned @huntergirl@TonyDr
 
Wait where’s @hannah mod? Also very good thread!
 
"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift. Lets look at the difference between standard nose thread procedures and the “Cat Whisker” technique.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
View attachment 172261View attachment 172262
However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

View attachment 172280View attachment 172282
Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
View attachment 172294
Smooth:
View attachment 172297
While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
View attachment 172305
The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
View attachment 172313
Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
View attachment 172317View attachment 172316
Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
 
"Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming

Hi silly lemons!! In this thread, I will be introducing the best at-home nose enhancement for drastically decreasing nasal width and adding nasal tip definition. This method is extremely experimental and has not been done professionally or at home anywhere in this community. Once my supplies come, I'll be attempting to do it on myself. I'll record the entire thing and post it. If it turns out successfully, I'll include an in depth tutorial with everything you need to know to do it yourself. Now, onto this thread! There have been many techniques shared across .org and .com to DIY enhance the nose. Some widespread methods are:
Botox
🧁Nose tip angle- Botox is injected into the depressor septi nasi (DSN). The DSN is a small muscle that runs from the maxilla to the nasal septum and columella. It is the main muscle that pulls the nasal tip and septum downwards. Injecting it with Botox will rotate your nasal tip upwards.
🧁Nostril flare- Botox is injected into muscles in the alar area, such as the nasalis, LLAN, and dilator naris. This procedure is meant to help people who excessively flare their nostrils while speaking, breathing, or smiling. It can also decrease your nostril width at rest, in some cases.

Fat dissolvers
🧁Meant to refine/shrink the nasal tip by injecting an adipocytolytic agent into the subcutaneous fat. Subcutaneous fat makes up less than 10% of the volume in the nasal tip, meaning results will be marginal.
Hydracortisone
🧁
Also meant to refine "bulbous" noses, it doesn't target the dorsum, alae, or nostrils. Extremely overrated, the very most it can do is thin the skin, since the skin on your nasal tip tends to be thicker than the rest of the skin on your nose. It will not shrink the cartilage like some people say. It's a topical cream, be realistic.
Filler
🧁This one isn't as commonly done at home, but it is one of the only methods meant to increase the volume of your nose rather than decrease it. The enhancements are endless; it can camouflage dorsal humps, raise the nasal tip, define the nasal bridge, add more projection and volume, straighten crooked or asymmetrical noses, and even give the illusion of a longer nose.
Threads
🧁Long: PDO (most standard option), PLLA, or PCL threads are inserted and stretch from the nasal root to the tip. Meant to lift, add projection, contour, and add structure to the nasal bridge.
🧁Short: PDO, PLLA, or PCL threads are subdermally inserted into the very tip of the nose to increase projection, rotate the nasal tip upwards or downwards, and define the tip.


As you can see, there are no widespread DIY approaches that substantially decrease nasal width. Most of them give minimal results, and the ones that actually do something (filler and threads) don't target nasal width. This is why "Cat Whisker" nostril slimming is revolutionary; it's basically a minimally invasive, semi-permanent alarplasty. So... what is it?

"Cat Whiskering" is a non-surgical, solely cosmetic procedure designed to alter the width of your nose. It was developed by Dr. TJ Tsay at Ageless MD in Tustin, California. This technique is extremely "niche". As far as I'm aware, this is the only clinic that performs it. You might be thinking, "Hannah, this isn't anything new or revolutionary, didn't you just say PDO threads are commonly used in the nose?" Well, silly unicorn, that's true; nose thread lifts are pretty common. However, this procedure is not a nose thread lift. Lets look at the difference between standard nose thread procedures and the “Cat Whisker” technique.

There are two standardized techniques for Nasal Thread Lifts: Nasal Bridge Lifts ("Long" threads), and Nasal Tip Lifts ("Short" threads). Everyone's heard of these. Don't get me wrong, they're great for adding volume, projection, and lift. Here's how they look from the front and side.
View attachment 172261View attachment 172262
However, the width of their noses stayed exactly the same. Now let's look at some "Cat Whisker" Nostril Slimming results.

View attachment 172280View attachment 172282
Absolutely insane, it's an alarplasty replica.

The procedure uses two types of threads: cog threads and smooth threads.
Cogged:
View attachment 172294
Smooth:
View attachment 172297
While smooth threads are great for collagen stimulation, improving skin health, and adding volume over time, the cogged threads are what add that mechanical pull. Imagine the barbs as tiny hooks. When the cogged threads are inserted into the skin, the barbs cling to the underlying tissue, staying in place and pulling. Because of this, the cogged threads are the center of this procedure. Here's the simplified process:

The cogged threads are superficially inserted into the subcutaneous fibromuscular layer of the alar base. The entry and exit points should've been marked along the alar subcutaneous tissue right before this, but I couldn't find any images that showed that.
View attachment 172305
The needle/cannula will be pulled out, but the thread will remain in place. As the barbs hook onto the tissue, the threads are carefully pulled and tighten, increasing the tension slowly. A decent amount of blood should be expected during this step; it will most likely be painful. The threads sticking out on both sides of the nose give it the "Cat Whiskers" name.
View attachment 172313
Once the thread is fully adjusted and both sides of the nose are symmetrical, a blunt cannula will be used to tuck the excess thread into the subcutaneous plane.
Once both sides are tucked in, smooth threads will be inserted into both sides near the nasal tip. The smooth threads will help add volume and definition over the course of a few weeks.
View attachment 172317View attachment 172316
Once the needles/cannulas for the smooth threads are pulled out, there should be no excess thread to have to cut or tuck in. The procedure ends here.


I'd like to make it clear, this thread is not a tutorial or a guide. It is simply introducing the new procedure. I didn't go too in depth on purpose, since I do not want to encourage it until I successfully practice it on myself. Once I test it on myself, I will include everything, such as specific tools and products needed, nose anatomy and things you have to avoid, proper insertion techniques, etc. Do your own research and fully understand where basic veins and arteries are before proceeding.
Good thread I’m doing Hydrocortisone and Aqualyx in my nose since I have a lot left over
 

i know, but the last 2 pics are where they add in the smooth threads, prob mono screws or something. its part of the procedure, ive watched all the videos Ageless Md has posted of the process and almost all of them include that step
 
Good thread I’m doing Hydrocortisone and Aqualyx in my nose since I have a lot left over
just stick with hydrocortisone. aqualyx is not worth it in any way, at least the other “high risk” methods also have high reward. you’re basically just doing high risk low reward
 
i know, but the last 2 pics are where they add in the smooth threads, prob mono screws or something. its part of the procedure, ive watched all the videos Ageless Md has posted of the process and almost all of them include that step
 

ill be careful, but im not just gonna skip that step. theres no point of the experiment if i dont fully go through with it. need to go all in
 
just stick with hydrocortisone. aqualyx is not worth it in any way, at least the other “high risk” methods also have high reward. you’re basically just doing high risk low reward
Okay 🥲 I just want a cute nose
 
ill be careful, but im not just gonna skip that step. theres no point of the experiment if i dont fully go through with it. need to go all in
Swear your nose was already decent why are you doing so much to it?
 
ill be careful, but im not just gonna skip that step. theres no point of the experiment if i dont fully go through with it. need to go all in
 

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