Choosing the right aesthetic treatments for subtle, natural results
For patients who want to start small, both Tessa Fraicola and Eva Mahoney, PA-C starting point: skin quality first. Eva’s approach is deliberate. “Improving the quality of the skin alone can make someone look much more refreshed without changing their features at all,” she says. It usually starts with microneedling or light laser reappearance to stimulate collagen production, then uses injectables as finishing touches rather than the foundation of a design. “When skin health is prioritized first, you often need far less filler to achieve a refreshed look. This prevents overdoing it and keeps the results subtle.”
From there, the most seamless results usually come from a multi-layered approach rather than a single treatment. Tessa uses an analogy that resonates with many patients. Think of aesthetic treatments as a cake with beautiful layers. Filler it provides the structural support that holds everything together. Microneedling and laser build the collagen that fills it. Chemical peels and medical grade skin care it is the final layer that gives the skin its final glow. Every ingredient plays a role. Without everyone, something is missing.
The key is patience. Halei describes her process as layering treatments conservatively over time, focusing on proportion from many angles, skin quality and soft structural support.
Eva takes the same long-term view: “Instead of chasing trends, we design a maintenance plan based on aging patterns and facial anatomy. Over time, small improvements blend beautifully without anyone being able to spot what changed.”
Natural-looking aesthetics at every stage of life
One of the most important things to understand about aesthetics is that the approach changes significantly depending on where you are in life. A great provider meets you right where you are.
In your 20s, the priority is preservation. Dana Baker, BSNdescribes it as your protection collagen the way you would protect a 401k. Preventative neuromodulators, consistent SPF and subtle skin treatments create a foundation for skin that ages beautifully over time. The goal is not dramatic change. It’s smart, early maintenance that makes a real difference decades later. “You still look,” Dana says. “Just rested and confident.”
In your 30s, the approach becomes more deliberate. Collagen begins to shift, volume moves subtly and fine lines take longer to bounce back. This is the decade where the multi-layered, multi-modal approach starts to make the most sense. Dana’s philosophy at this stage: “Minor changes. Careful placement. Always building, never overdoing.”
In middle age, the conversation changes completely. Dana is thoughtful here: “Middle age is not something to be ‘fixed’. It’s something to support.” He recalls a patient who came in recently and said, “I don’t want to look different. I just want to stop looking exhausted.” That’s the goal. It restores soft volume where it’s been lost, improving skin quality from the inside out, letting character linger while harsh shadows fade.
The role of the provider: Why it matters who you choose
Every provider gave the same advice: choose carefully.
Eva Mahoney puts it more directly: “Choose your provider more carefully than your treatment. Look for someone whose past work looks consistently subtle, balanced, and expressive. Your provider’s philosophy matters more than the product being used.”
Ability matters, of course. But also the values. In Apex Skin, the two are inseparable. The right provider listens before treating. They assess the whole person and not individual concerns. They prioritize what’s right for you over what’s currently trending and are willing to have an honest conversation when a request isn’t in your best interest. It’s the standard that guides every provider at Apex Skin and the same commitment that earned the practice its title Aesthetics Best Practice for Natural Beauty from Aesthetic Everything®.
Halei puts it plainly: “Choose a provider whose results consistently look beautiful and who values restraint as much as skill.” Isabelle adds that a good provider doesn’t just do what is asked. They guide. Dana puts it more simply: “My job is not to change your face. It’s to support it.”
At Apex Skin, every tip is based on this foundation. Providers spend real time with patients, asking questions, listening and creating a program that is truly personalized. Whether you’re entering for the first time or adding to a treatment program you’ve already started, the approach is the same: conservative, thoughtful, and always focused on you.
