

"If I took the same photo and showed it to people from 10 different regions with 10 different backgrounds, I would get roughly the same results."īeauty at the touch of a button? Fairly irresistible. "Beauty is not in the eye of the beholder," Leyvand says.
#GOLDEN RATIO PERFECT FACE SKIN#
One hundred subjects may not seem like that many when it comes to calculating something as ephemeral as true beauty, but Leyvand contends that attractiveness ratings are, in fact, universal-that the same numbers would hold true in any country or race, barring a region's specific cultural preferences for eye and hair color (which, interestingly, he says weigh more heavily upon our perception of someone's attractiveness than skin tone). The resulting beauty scale enables Leyvand's program to morph any face toward a higher attractiveness rating. The size of and distance between the features of each face were measured and correlated for which scored well and which didn't.
#GOLDEN RATIO PERFECT FACE SOFTWARE#
Where could we sign up?ĭeveloped during his graduate studies at Tel Aviv University in Israel, Leyvand's software is based on a study in which 100 photos of women and men were given attractiveness ratings between one and six. They were nothing short of amazing, like best-case-scenario cosmetic surgery the "afters" didn't look model-fied or in any way unrecognizable, but, with a mere millimeter skimmed off a chin or a minutely extended brow-changes so small, they were barely identifiable-they had gone from attractive to something much.more attractive. The ELLE team stumbled across his "digitally beautified" before-and-after photos one afternoon at work. A soft-spoken, Seattle-based computer scientist, Leyvand develops geographical mapping programs for a well-known software brand by day and perfects faces-strictly by special request-by night. And Tommer Leyvand may be the first person who has promised to deliver the goods (two-dimensionally, at least). Still, theories are one thing results are another. Identified in ancient Greece, this magical mystery ratio somehow governs the proportions of everything from human embryos to azalea buds, and, if the photo on the right is any indication, may also explain the meteoric rise of model Agyness Deyn. And in 1997, a retired California plastic surgeon introduced the Marquardt Mask, a robotic-looking web of lines that dissects faces using the ratio of 1 to 1.618, or phi. esque studded cage that measured every inch of a starlet's head to determine where she needed the makeup maestro's signature sleight of hand most. In the 1930s, Max Factor launched his Beauty Micro-meter, a Hellraiser

Sometime around 300 B.C., the Greek mathematician Euclid identified the "Golden Proportion," an ideal face two-thirds as wide as it is tall, with a nose no longer than the distance between the eyes. Beauty is easy enough to spot, but tricky to define-despite countless attempts to do so.
