To get a more accurate idea of what your results are likely to look like I suggest reviewing before, and after pictures of patients who have similar breast to your own. Noticed the distance between your two breast on the chest wall in comparison to the woman in your wish pictures. The women in your wish pictures did not have tubular breast that were wide on the chest wall. For that reason those pictures are probably not realistic. I suggest having your provider review as many before, and after pictures with you, as they have of previous patients who had similar body characteristics. By reviewing pictures of previous patients who had similar breast size with 300 cc implants. You should get a pretty good idea. Each provider will have their own way of guiding patients through implants selection. Different providers do this differently. There are generally three variables to determine the quality of breast augmentation surgery. The first is the patient’s candidacy for the procedure. The second is the choice of implants in regards to size shape and type. The third variable is the surgeons ability to technically place the implant in the correct an atomic position . Understanding your candidacy for the procedure is an inherent, important variable that should be thought through carefully in order to not be disappointed with the outcome. Tubular breast that sit wide on the chest wall are not going to create an easy, natural cleavage. With small breasts that have a narrow diameter that sit laterally it’s going to be challenging to get anything resembling your wish pictures. Implant selection is important, as is the surgeons ability to perform the procedure correctly. Understanding your candidacy, for the procedure is a very important part of maintaining high patient satisfaction. Not all individuals are ideal candidates for breast augmentation. Individuals, poor, less than ideal candidates should recognize that there may be room for excellent improvements, but the results are going to be based on a combination of variables, including their own candidacy. It’s never a bad idea to have more than one consultation. During each consultation, ask each provider to open up their portfolio and show you their entire collection of before, and after pictures of previous patients that had similar body characteristics to your own. An experience provider should have no difficulty showing you the before and after pictures of at least 50 previous patients Being shown a handful of images, representing the best outcomes of a providers career, or of patients that don’t look like you in the before. Pictures may be insufficient to get a clear understanding of what results will look like, what average results look like in the hands of each provider or how many of these procedures, each provider has actually done. Ask each provider what their most common reason is for revision surgery, what their revision rates are, and what the revision policy is. There’s no correct number of consultations needed to find the right provider. The more consultations, you have the more likely you are to find the best provider for your needs. Having only one consultation eliminates the patient’s ability to choose the better provider. I generally recommend patients avoid virtual consultations whenever possible, and I highly recommend against traveling long distances for elective surgical procedures. Best, Mats Hagstrom, MD