The perfect smile

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The Perfect Smile "Prunes!" This declaration probably doesn't mean anything to you, but it's pretty wellknown in the field of photography. Did you know that, long before they were saying 'cheese!' photographic subjects were told to 'say prunes!' It's true! Back in the 1800s (circa 1830 to as late as 1900), those having their portraits taken were told to say the word 'prunes' as a fairly standard practice in order to elicit the kind of 'smile' (or perhaps more accurate, un-smile) for their pictures. Have you seen any of those photos from the 1800s? People all look so grim, don't they?! You've probably wondered when seeing those old pictures why everyone was so unhappy back then. The truth is they weren't necessarily unhappy; that was just the norm, or perhaps even the vogue, when having your picture taken. The idea of an actual smile, let alone showing your pearly whites, was pretty much forbidden in photos. As a matter of fact, it was really only kids and drunks who were known to smile much in pictures. Those dark, grimacing photos didn't exactly contain the kind of smiles any dentist would be proud to say belonged to their clients, eh? Fast forward just a few decades. Somewhere back in the early-to-mid 1900s, when having their pictures taken, folks started saying 'cheese!' Nobody really knows where this began or who started it, but photographic subjects ever since have been encouraged to... smile! Thankfully, those old grim, non-smiling portraits of the past are no longer en vogue. Today, we like smiles; we like a lot of them; and we like them to be big! Just think about how the concept of the 'perfect smile' has changed over the centuries. Years ago, the famous (or perhaps 'infamous') so-called smile of the Mona Lisa was considered beautiful. That closed-mouthed portrait, however brilliant it is artistically, isn't exactly the best concept of what we'd call the perfect smile these days, is it? No. Today, the idea of the perfect smile is quite different. In fact, one famous painting even has Jesus not just smiling, but with a wide open mouth laughing. Now, that's a much better picture than a grimacing face, isn't it? And what about another famous art work, this one painted in 1930 by artist Grant Wood... American Gothic? It's the depiction of two American farmers, a man holding a pitchfork standing next to a woman. The two stand in front of their quaint house... and their smiles? Well, they're non-existent. So were they happy? No one, except the couple and perhaps even the artist, knows for sure. But why would a couple stand to have their portrait painted without smiling? Would you? The fact remains that, way back when, for many folks having their pictures taken or the portraits painted, the perfect smile still involved a closed mouth that showed no teeth. But why would all these people in all those old photos, pictures, and portraits want to keep their mouths closed, even when they were 'smiling'? Perhaps it was because their teeth were nothing to smile about.


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The perfect smile by health and welness tips - Issuu