Skye Wheatley takes off her bandages following her fox eye lift surgery and finally debuts her new face: ‘Results coming in hot’

Skye Wheatley has taken off the bandages she’s been wearing since undergoing a  controversial fox eye lift surgery and debuted her new face on Thursday. 

Fans of the Australian influencer, 30, got a glimpse at the results of the work she had done in Turkey in small snippets shared to her Instagram Stories.

She shared multiple bandage-free videos and photos showing off her new almond-shaped eyes. 

‘Results coming in hot,’ Wheatley captioned a short video in which she showed off both sides of her face and removed her new glasses to give fans a better look at her visage. 

She also explained that she’s keeping her face covered with see-through tape to assist the healing process and prevent swelling after removing the heavy duty bandages. 

The influencer, once known for her ‘girl next door’ looks, is entirely unrecognisable from the young woman who first strode into the Australian public eye in 2014 on Big Brother. 

Wheatley, who went on to become one of Australia’s first ‘Instagram stars’, recently returned from Turkey where she underwent a fox eye lift, liposuction, a temporal lift and a blepharoplasty. 

The fox eye lift surgery, designed to mimic the popular red carpet look of the same name, has pulled back the outer corner of Wheatley’s eyes so that they have the almond shape usually achieved with dramatic eye make up. 

Skye Wheatley has taken off the bandages she’s been wearing since undergoing a controversial fox eye lift surgery and debuted her new face on Thursday 

Fans of the Australian influencer, 30, got a glimpse at the results of the work she had done in Turkey in small snippets shared to her Instagram Stories

Fans of the Australian influencer, 30, got a glimpse at the results of the work she had done in Turkey in small snippets shared to her Instagram Stories 

Results from the minimally invasive surgery are said to last for between six and 12 months. 

These procedures were just the latest in a series of operations the 30-year-old has undergone over the last decade in her quest to achieve the ‘perfect’ appearance. 

She was seen in public for the first time since her various surgeries earlier this month as she posed up for a series of selfies next to her car. 

Wheatley, who went on to become one of Australia's first 'Instagram stars', recently returned from Turkey where she underwent a fox eye lift, liposuction, a temporal lift and a blepharoplasty

Wheatley, who went on to become one of Australia’s first ‘Instagram stars’, recently returned from Turkey where she underwent a fox eye lift, liposuction, a temporal lift and a blepharoplasty 

The influencer also revealed bruises around the top of her thighs in a pair of tiny shorts after also getting some liposuction during her cosmetic surgery holiday.

The sighting came just days after Wheatley spoke about her procedures on social media, in response to followers claiming she has a ‘plastic surgery addiction’. 

‘Everyone is beautiful with or without surgery, but I think the more damaging thing is to get all these enhancements done without being honest about it,’ she told followers during a live Instagram Q&A. 

‘There [are] so many girls online who’ve had surgical enhancements and say nothing. I won’t be one of those people.’ 

However, Wheatley went on to reveal that she wants to get even more liposuction done after her recent trip. She said this despite previously revealing that her plastic surgeon had told her she ‘doesn’t need it’ and advised against it. 

She also added that she was going for symmetry with her operation, saying ‘I just want it to look even.’

In Australia, the cosmetic surgery industry brought in a number of rigorous reforms backed by practitioners in July 2023. 

New rules for Australian cosmetic doctors include a mandatory GP referral before all cosmetic surgery, new testing for body dysmorphia in patients, and a one-week cooling off period between consultation and procedures, plus a crackdown on advertising (including social media) that downplays risks. 

Body dysmorphic disorder is a mental health condition involving obsessive focus on a perceived flaw in appearance. 

The flaw may be minor or imagined. But the person may spend hours a day trying to fix it. 

‘I can’t show my face yet it’s way too scary, but when I heal more I will show the process don’t worry, Wheatley told her fans last Thursday.

When pushed to film her face, she replied, ‘Nah, it’s horrific.’

In a rare make up free photo shared to her Instagram Stories yesterday,  

She looked delighted with her results despite the heavy bandages

She looked delighted with her results despite the heavy bandages 

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk