A nostril base reduction is often described as “make the nostrils smaller,” but the base cannot be treated as an isolated detail.
It is more complex than many people assume because the nostril base is both a focal aesthetic frame and part of the airway. If the plan is too aggressive, the nose can look tight or breathing can feel compromised.
Planning starts with anatomy and balance: is the width truly coming from the base at rest, or is it being amplified by tip support, projection, rotation, or expression. The base and tip must remain one story.
My approach is controlled refinement, not aggressive change. The goal is proportion that reads natural in motion and in normal light.
If you want a precise, face‑matched recommendation, an online consultation is the right next step.
