How to Smile for a Photograph
Our goal is to master such an effortless grin |
Like a crooked Cary Grant |
One frock won’t suit every occasion and neither will a single smile. From tender closed mouth moments to raucous full grin occasions, you’ll need a small wardrobe of smiles to appropriately express each exposure opportunity.
Start by mastering your natural smile. Your lips should unveil your upper teeth while cloaking most of the lower pearls. Extending to around the incisors, aim for about twenty percent more expression than you might expect.
To call upon your expression apparel, let us summarize the philosophy of Mr. P. Pan: keep a happy thought in your pocket. Then pull it out before the photographer flashes. You can also warm up your smiler with a quick chuckle immediately before the shutter yawns.
After you’ve mastered your basic beam add at least another pair of options to your portfolio. Whether it’s a quirky smirk or a coy simper, find something that exhibits your unique entity. However, if you are someone who doesn’t like the way their teeth look when smiling for a photograph, then you may want to have a look at porcelain veneers to see whether this would make you feel more confident when showing your smile.
Someone wishes they had applied liner |
- Crest and Oral-B 3D White regimen includes the Crest 3D White Pro Effects Whitestrips ($50 for 20 doses)
- Crest 3D White Vivid Toothpaste ($3.25 – $.4.25)
- Crest 3D White MultiCare Whitening Rinse ($5.89 & $7.29)
- Oral-B Pulsar 3D White Advanced Vivid Toothbrush
- Oral-B Advantage 3D White Vivid Toothbrush ($3.49 & $6.99)