What makes nice teeth




















Facial Esthetics: Facial and muscular considerations vary from patient to patient and are studied through visual and photographic analysis. They include how the lips frame your smile when you speak, smile or laugh. Gingival Gum Esthetics: The health and appearance of your gums are essential elements in smile design.

Microesthetics: This involves the subtle characteristics that make your teeth look the way they do, such as how they reflect light and unique marks or colorations.

The ideal restoration is one with qualities closely resembling those of natural teeth. The anatomy of natural teeth is unique from person-to-person and specific to each tooth. Macroesthetics: This analyzes the relationships and proportions between front teeth, surrounding tissue landmarks and facial characteristics, in order to ensure natural and attractive restorative care and smile makeover treatment. Working in collaboration, your cosmetic dentist and dental laboratory technician combine their technical and artistic abilities to create a natural and esthetically pleasing appearance in which the shapes, sizes and arrangement of individual teeth blend with and complement your particular features.

The lips have been compared to a frame that sets off the image of your smile, encompassing your teeth and gums. Enhancing or correcting the shape, fullness and symmetry of your lips can make your smile seem fuller. For optimal esthetics, your facial features should line up to your teeth and lip lines. When your lips form a broad smile, an imaginary line can be drawn through the corners of the mouth, from one side to the other.

The amount of upper front maxillary anterior tooth revealed below this line helps create a vibrant, youthful image. In a youthful smile, the upper front teeth should fill between 75 to percent of the space between your upper and lower lips in a full smile. The starting point of any smile design is the facial midline, an imaginary vertical line drawn between the front two upper teeth.

For optimal esthetic value, the facial midline should be in the middle of the face. Prominent facial features — such as the eyes, nose and chin — can be misleading when locating the midline. For instance, your eyes may be at slightly different levels, or your nose may be off-center, lessening their usefulness when trying to find the midline.

Whenever possible, the midline between the upper front teeth central incisors should coincide with the facial midline. In cases where this is not possible, the midline between the central incisors should be perpendicular to the imaginary line that could be drawn through the corners of the mouth.

Your smile line is the line created by the top of your lower lip. In an ideal smile line, the edges of your upper teeth should be parallel to your lower lip when you smile. The bottom of your lower lip should have the same line as the gums of your lower jaw. This should always be a standard, regardless of the size or shape of your smile.

Once your dentist has determined the orientation of your smile line, he or she can design its curve, or shape, and determine the length of your new restorations. Attractive smiles have various things in common, such as teeth that are white, unstained, straight, evenly spaced with no gaps between them and not crowded or overlapping. When you smile, your top teeth show fully in a good proportion to your gums.

The line where the gums and teeth meet is smooth and even. In many cases, the size and shape of the teeth or jaw can cause the overbite. If you have too much or too little space between your teeth, it may result in significant problems and even result in crowded teeth. Underbites occur when bottom teeth are in front of the top teeth and overlap them — the opposite of an overbite.

Crossbites occur when top teeth — either the back or the front — fit inside of the bottom teeth. This may be caused by a jaw misalignment or it may just be a misalignment of the teeth. An anterior crossbite is when the front top teeth are behind the bottom front teeth.

Crossbite may only affect a single tooth, or whole groups of teeth could be affected. However, there are some key features that dentists or orthodontists look at when evaluating your teeth.

When you look at teeth from the front — think of looking at yourself in the mirror — a perfect bite will feature upper front teeth that are lined up parallel to your lower lip when you smile. When you close your bite, about half to two-thirds of the length of your bottom teeth should be easily visible.

Overlapping too much would mean you have an overbite. Your upper arch of teeth should be a bit wider than your lower arch, and your upper teeth should all be sitting just outside of your lower teeth when you bite down. Also known as the arch view, this is what you see when you open your mouth wide and low up at the bottoms of the upper teeth or down at the tops of the lower teeth. When you look at teeth with this view, they should be even and aligned with a nice curve.

For the perfect teeth, all teeth should touch without any space or overlapping between them. When you look at your teeth from the side, the backs of the top front teeth need to be resting gently in front of your bottom teeth. If the edges of the top teeth are biting down directly down or behind the edges of the bottom incisors, this is an abnormal bite known as an underbite. Upper teeth should not stick out too far in front of the bottom incisors, and if they do, this is called excess overjet.

When looking from the side, all of your upper teeth should fib between the lower teeth, much like gears fit together in a wheel.

Achieving your perfect smile means designing a system that will produce the goals that we discuss for your particular situation. Laster has been in private practice for 16 years and has the expertise to come up with a great solution for any situation no matter how complex or simple. Laster is also the areas leading expert on clear aligner treatment and the only orthodontist that has designed his own patent pending clear aligner system. LPS clear aligners have shown better results than any other clear aligner in preliminary tests.

Braces, often thought of as the more traditional treatment for a perfect bite and straight teeth, are also available, including these options:. To find out what types of bite problems you may be facing and the best treatment options for your needs, schedule your free consultation with Laster Orthodontics today.

At Laster Orthodontics , we help families develop healthy, life-changing smiles using customized treatments, cutting-edge technologies, and caring relationships. In general, teeth are categorised into three shapes: Square, Triangular or Oval.

Usually feminine teeth are more rounded and a dominant individual would have more square-ish and shape edged teeth. There are no hard and fast rules, at the end of the day it comes down to each to their own. Celebrities like them white, sometimes very very white! Without going into too much detail, once you have the right size, shape and colour of teeth, they may need to be aligned properly to complete the perfect look.

This could be either achieved through braces , Invisalign , Crowns or Veneers. Or… simply nothing at all! A study supports that the unstoppable desire to eat sugar is similar to drug addiction…. Great experience! Dr Warren is a great dentist who is gentle and really experienced. He has a great bedside manner that puts patients at ease!

Waiting time was short, and the care taken into his work is top-notch. Will be using Lifestyle Smiles for the years to come.



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