Caption: Warning: That smile is highly contagious. (And I’m not complaining.) 😄 #SmileSpreader #LovelySmile
In the quiet village of Elden Brook, there lived a clockmaker named lovely smile
Experts from platforms like Dental Partners of Boston recommend several habits for maintaining an attractive smile: Caption: Warning: That smile is highly contagious
We often sabotage our own confidence by comparing our teeth to airbrushed magazine covers. Let us be clear: In Medieval art, smiles were rare and often
Culturally, the ideal of the lovely smile has shifted across centuries. In Medieval art, smiles were rare and often reserved for the foolish or the mad (the Mona Lisa’s ambiguous smile was revolutionary partly because it was enigmatic rather than pious or lewd). The 18th century saw the rise of the “natural smile” as a sign of moral sincerity, while Victorian England considered wide smiles vulgar. Today, we live in an era of teeth-whitening strips and orthodontics, yet we still instinctively prefer a slightly imperfect, spontaneous smile over a bleached, frozen one.