
Capture
A still photograph of your face in profile, taken with a calibrated tablet under our studio's neutral daylight.
A twenty-two-minute Mirror reading. The first conversation we have at HUE — and the last one, before any decision is taken.
Every patient, every visit, begins with a Mirror reading. Twenty-two minutes, one hundred and ninety-two anatomical points.
Two physicians review every reading before any plan is offered. Mirror proposes; the council decides.
Treatment plans paced to your face, your calendar, and your life. Quarterly reads. Twelve-month minimum.
The work we recommend not doing is the work most clinics will sell you. We say no, often.
Mirror is the diagnostic system we use for every consultation at HUE. It reads the face in four movements. By the end, your physician has a precise reading — and you have it in writing.

A still photograph of your face in profile, taken with a calibrated tablet under our studio's neutral daylight.

One hundred and ninety-two anatomical points are mapped across brow, eye, malar, jaw and chin. The mesh is your harmony map.

Harmony, symmetry, tension and proportion — scored against a reference range. Printed to a single page. Held in confidence.

Reviewed by two physicians. A short note: what to do, what may wait, what shall not be done at all. Yours to take home.
A protocol observed by every member of the practice — Dr. Han, the diagnostic system, the senior aestheticians, the concierge. The same four movements, the same care, every time.
Twenty-two minutes with Mirror, calibrated to neutral daylight. One hundred and ninety-two anatomical points, recorded once.
Two physicians and a senior aesthetician convene. They agree on what is to be done, what may wait, and what shall not be done.
A twelve-month plan, drawn to your face and your calendar. Printed, signed, and yours to take home.
Quarterly readings, adjusted as needed. The work compounds in the writing. Reviewed each season.
Each is performed by Dr. Han or a senior nurse-injector. Each is placed within a longer plan of care, agreed in council. None is sold by the unit. Begin with a reading; the right treatment follows from it.









Six rooms, one floor of a contemporary Apgujeong building. Photographed on a Tuesday morning in February.






Engineer first, dermatologist second. Sojin Han trained at MIT in mechanical engineering before returning to Seoul for her MD at Yonsei. Her practice is built on the conviction that aesthetic medicine has, for too long, asked the artist's question — what would look better? — when it should also ask the engineer's: what does the tissue, measurably, require?
Read moreIf the question you would like answered is not below, the concierge is the right person to write to.