Q. thanks for asking!
i never really cared about it, but lately since my old dentist Attila retired to smoke more ciggerettes i have interviewed a few dentists,
their photography is terrible - they only shoot jpegs!! on P mode!!
help!
i never really cared about it, but lately since my old dentist Attila retired to smoke more ciggerettes i have interviewed a few dentists,
their photography is terrible - they only shoot jpegs!! on P mode!!
help!
A. AGK, this is me.
The color rendition is not accurate enough to use a photo as an exact guide to the lab for shade matching. We have to take a snap of the stock shade guide next to the tooth in question and then only use it as a reference. "The shade is just a bit lighter than the C1 guide." When the technician has your photo in hand showing the C1 guide and the tooth in question, he can tell how MUCH lighter it is. Here's a sample of what I might send to the lab for a difficult color match:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/4751230269/
I have started using RAW with a WhiBal card to get as close as I can to the accurate color rendition.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/4724224653/
A photo is helpful in showing variations and characterizations on a tooth.
It is not so helpful in showing translucent areas, as the flash washes them out. When you bounce light off of the surface, it's not so easy to see THROUGH that surface.
I usually use "A" for intraoral photography. I set the aperture to f/11 or f/16 and the camera will select 1/60 as I am using flash anyhow.
I send a print copy to the lab with the case and I also send it via e-mail so that can look at it on the monitor.
I also use photography to make copies of x-rays for specialists and insurance companies. You'll see some examples here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/tags/dental/
From the patient's point of view, they probably think it does not matter, because they do not realize what goes on behind the scenes. When we choose a shade for a tooth, it's not the same as just making a match and telling the lab what the Pantone color is. There are many colors within the body of a tooth and the way that one blends to another is an essential bit of the description. A picture is worth at least a thousand words here.
On a completely different wavelength, photography is important to my patients because I have decorated my office with about 30 or 40 of my own prints and I hope it makes the place more cheerful and interesting. I have a spots where I swap out photos from time-to-time and people DO notice, so I guess they appreciate what they are looking at.
The color rendition is not accurate enough to use a photo as an exact guide to the lab for shade matching. We have to take a snap of the stock shade guide next to the tooth in question and then only use it as a reference. "The shade is just a bit lighter than the C1 guide." When the technician has your photo in hand showing the C1 guide and the tooth in question, he can tell how MUCH lighter it is. Here's a sample of what I might send to the lab for a difficult color match:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/4751230269/
I have started using RAW with a WhiBal card to get as close as I can to the accurate color rendition.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/4724224653/
A photo is helpful in showing variations and characterizations on a tooth.
It is not so helpful in showing translucent areas, as the flash washes them out. When you bounce light off of the surface, it's not so easy to see THROUGH that surface.
I usually use "A" for intraoral photography. I set the aperture to f/11 or f/16 and the camera will select 1/60 as I am using flash anyhow.
I send a print copy to the lab with the case and I also send it via e-mail so that can look at it on the monitor.
I also use photography to make copies of x-rays for specialists and insurance companies. You'll see some examples here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/samfeinstein/tags/dental/
From the patient's point of view, they probably think it does not matter, because they do not realize what goes on behind the scenes. When we choose a shade for a tooth, it's not the same as just making a match and telling the lab what the Pantone color is. There are many colors within the body of a tooth and the way that one blends to another is an essential bit of the description. A picture is worth at least a thousand words here.
On a completely different wavelength, photography is important to my patients because I have decorated my office with about 30 or 40 of my own prints and I hope it makes the place more cheerful and interesting. I have a spots where I swap out photos from time-to-time and people DO notice, so I guess they appreciate what they are looking at.
How did Hitler die and why are there no pictures of his body?
Q. It doesn't make any sense that the greatest dictator was found death and nobody took any pictures of him. Also how can they burn his body thats just bullshit. They should keep it for evidenence.
probably all the pictures are fake
look at this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNtQZcQVYGU
look at the videos please before you criticize me
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNtQZcQVYGU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmrbncRzFRM&feature=related
probably all the pictures are fake
look at this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNtQZcQVYGU
look at the videos please before you criticize me
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNtQZcQVYGU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmrbncRzFRM&feature=related
A. Once the little corporal could hear and feel the pounding of the Russia's Red Army on his bunker door, the leader of the German National Socialist Woker's Party decided he was no longer fit to face his foe, and sent the children of the Hitler Jugend, and the old men of the Volkssturm to die instead.
Was he truly the greatest dictator? Joseph Stalin deserves that title, since he outlived Adolf Hilter, and his armies destroyed those of Nazi Germany (and her allies) starting in the summer of 1944. Hitler chose to end his war by the use of a poisonous cyanide capsule, with a self-inflicted shot to the head with a Luger to make sure he would not be captured alive.
While his body was burned outside the bunker with liberal amounts of petrol, the remaining parts were still found by the Russians who combed Berlin with a fine tooth looking for it. The pieces they did find were taken back to Moscow, as evidence, and were kept under lock in storage.
The Russians did a fine job of erasing all the traces that parts of Hitler's body were in their possession. But recently they allowed forensic scientists to study the fragment of Hitler's teeth they had been keeping secretly for 50 years, and the tests came back positive from dental records taken from Hitler's dentist.
This story is perhaps one of the most interesting to come out the Second World War, undoubtedly at the time, and for 50 years after there were many false stories about the demise of the little corporal and his "Thousand-year Reich."
Was he truly the greatest dictator? Joseph Stalin deserves that title, since he outlived Adolf Hilter, and his armies destroyed those of Nazi Germany (and her allies) starting in the summer of 1944. Hitler chose to end his war by the use of a poisonous cyanide capsule, with a self-inflicted shot to the head with a Luger to make sure he would not be captured alive.
While his body was burned outside the bunker with liberal amounts of petrol, the remaining parts were still found by the Russians who combed Berlin with a fine tooth looking for it. The pieces they did find were taken back to Moscow, as evidence, and were kept under lock in storage.
The Russians did a fine job of erasing all the traces that parts of Hitler's body were in their possession. But recently they allowed forensic scientists to study the fragment of Hitler's teeth they had been keeping secretly for 50 years, and the tests came back positive from dental records taken from Hitler's dentist.
This story is perhaps one of the most interesting to come out the Second World War, undoubtedly at the time, and for 50 years after there were many false stories about the demise of the little corporal and his "Thousand-year Reich."
What kind of lighting would I use to take professional pictures for an online clothing store?
Q. I am creating an online store and was wondering how I can get professional looking pictures without having a photographer do it for me. I have a mannequin and I know I would most likely need a backdrop and good lighting.. I have a 10 megapixel digital camera, so that is already set. Just curious to what I would need to buy to get that nice look, for example on 80spurple.com -- thank you!
A. Professional images are made by pro photographers. Houses are built by builders, teeth are fixed by dentists.
If you have the time go study photography, you could use 2 or three off camera flashs, 2-3 constants or a combination.
You could buy or make a large light tent.
a
If you have the time go study photography, you could use 2 or three off camera flashs, 2-3 constants or a combination.
You could buy or make a large light tent.
a
why do dentists make a mold of your teeth before getting braces and is it important?
Q. why do dentists make a mold of your teeth before getting braces and is it important?
i think i need braces and i want to get them. other people think so to and they keep on telling me that. why do dentists make molds of your teeth. is it important? how long does it take for your dentist to say u need braces?
i think i need braces and i want to get them. other people think so to and they keep on telling me that. why do dentists make molds of your teeth. is it important? how long does it take for your dentist to say u need braces?
A. so they can have a 3-d picture of your teeth and determine the right size brackets to put on . and yes, it is important . it's this goo-y thing like clay and they leave it on your teeth for about a 1minute ( or a little more ) until it hardens . some people say it taste bad but it tasted ok to me . i had bubblegum flavor :)
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