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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Open Source Community Anatomy Library
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<blockquote data-quote="DigiSculpt Design Center" data-source="post: 365189" data-attributes="member: 26844"><p>I find there's no direct answer to this. I've worked with groups that want designs to be specific down to the point of anatomy to be dependent on the patients regular diet, and others that just want "Lee Culp Young" to be used on all patients. The answer you get to this will largely be dependent on where and what decade the answerer studied. Since I majored in English Education, I just try and find a nice harmony between making the dentition look natural but slightly more defined. Match the buccal corridor, match ridges, keep contacts broad but light, minimize excursive movement obstacles, get honest feedback from the technicians or clients working from your designs, it all just becomes muscle memory.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DigiSculpt Design Center, post: 365189, member: 26844"] I find there's no direct answer to this. I've worked with groups that want designs to be specific down to the point of anatomy to be dependent on the patients regular diet, and others that just want "Lee Culp Young" to be used on all patients. The answer you get to this will largely be dependent on where and what decade the answerer studied. Since I majored in English Education, I just try and find a nice harmony between making the dentition look natural but slightly more defined. Match the buccal corridor, match ridges, keep contacts broad but light, minimize excursive movement obstacles, get honest feedback from the technicians or clients working from your designs, it all just becomes muscle memory. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
Open Source Community Anatomy Library
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