Hey, I think this will be more of interest to Pekay, but perhaps others can chime in. This concerns all of the above, jaw surgery and under-eye hollowness as well as "aging" especially.
So a guy who I think looks ABSOLUTELY amazing and he's 55 years old now is Daniel Day-Lewis. I mean the guy has model good looks, somewhat of a long face actually and also a longer philitrum, but all of that said, his bone structure and soft tissue is preternaturally strong and resistant to what most people look like as they get older. A few words on this.
First, I think people who are generally "good looking," also look better when they're older --that's just us responding to their being good looking.
But the second interesting thing here is that DDL the underlying architecture of DDL's face is such that there is very little soft tissue sagging whatsoever as he's aged, especially around the under-eye area.
Third, there must be something genetic about his facial and bodily soft tissue as well. He's always been extremely slim/ripped/high metabolism type of person clearly. Perhaps some people have genetically gifted soft tissue that is somewhat resistant to sagging. From what I know of him he definitely does not seem like the type of guy who goes to a beauty salon or would ever have cosmetic surgery. He broke his nose while training for the film THE BOXER and never even had it straightened. His nose is big, but due to his broad facial bone structure, it looks balanced. His eyes are also on the much wider apart side of the spectrum.
I don't mean to make this a celebrity thread but it would be interesting to know what the underlying structural and/or soft features of his face are which allow him to look and age so well. He's 55 which is by now means "old" but I would have thought his facial features would show more "sag". I feel in my 30s mine already do quite a bit...and that's why I want my bone structure augmented.
I mean sure there's some slight wrinkling over the years, and grey hair, but otherwise the overall tautness of his features has remained unchanged!
And to clarify on the "dark circles" issue. I don't have dark circles in the sense of skin tissue or color, rather I just have depressed under orbital areas and this is what causes the shadow to hit that area a bit...