A deeper eyelid incision is very common in eyelid repair. It is mainly due to excessive removal of the deeper tissue under the incision during blepharoplasty, and when the skin of the upper eyelid and the lid plate are adhered to the skin hardens, a very obvious depression is formed. This can be improved naturally by repairing the above situation. For excessive removal of deep tissue, it is necessary to use the eye’s own tissue (fat, muscle, orbital septum) to pave the missing area so that the incision is flat and inconspicuous. Double eyelid incision depressions can only be improved with the above repair and will not disappear over time because the tissue loss at the incision location is real, so this should be avoided as much as possible when performing blepharoplasty. It can be prevented to the greatest extent possible if handled delicately during the surgical operation. The sutures are usually very fine and tension-free, with a full set of high-precision surgical instruments, and the design follows the skin texture, hiding the traces in the skin folds and reducing the size of the incision without affecting the normal peel and fat removal. The incision depression will not be too obvious.