Dental Crowns

It is a common mistake for patients to think that their teeth are
all one color. Your teeth are never just one color. They are a series
of superimposed translucent layers of varying shades. Teeth also
have different surface textures that reflect light in ways that
affect the color of your teeth.
Your
teeth are made up of three layers: pulp, dentin, and enamel. Each
layer has a specific thickness, composition and structure. Additionally,
the way light reflects off of or transluces through the layers gives
you the color of your teeth. Using knowledge about the three layers
of teeth allow dentists and dental technicians to recreate natural-looking
crowns.
Who
Makes the Crowns?
Dental
technicians are the true artisans in dentistry. Dentists begin the
crown-making process by reducing the size of the tooth, making an
impression of the reduced tooth, and selecting the proper shades
of the tooth. This information is then transferred to the dental
technician so a crown can be made.
Dental
technicians blend science with artistic knowledge to recreate natural-looking
teeth. Artistically, they use frame and reference, proportion and
idealism, perspective and illusion as well as symmetry to mimic
nature. Understanding the language of colors and using new dental
materials and techniques has allowed the dentist to not only "fill"
missing spaces but create dental artwork as well.
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