Colors
Colors
Colors
Laith Hadi
Fatima Rheda
Abd-Al Aziz Mohammed
Lana salah
CCoolloorrss
and
and Shades
Shades Selection
Selection
SHADE SELECTION IN FIXED PROSTHODONTICS
Process of replicating of the color of the adjacent teeth in an
artificial prosthesis. The success of dental treatments as perceived
by our patients is often evaluated on appearance, rather than long-
term health, function and comfort. Everyone, it seems, is primarily
interested in color, Color is light, modified by an object as perceived
by an eye”.
Color that is perceived is the result of a light source, the object that
absorbs, transmits, reflects or scatters the light from the source, and
the interpretation of the result by the human visual system. Without
Light Color Does Not Exist.
COLOR & LIGHT
The color of an object is determined by the light that enters the human eye
from that object
What is commonly called "the color of a tooth" is actually the color of the
reflected light.
Light: is a Form of visible energy that is part of the radiant energy spectrum.
Radiant energy possesses specific wavelengths, which may be used to identify the
type of energy. The eye is only sensitive to the visible portion of the spectrum (380 –
750nm) Different wavelengths constitute the different colors we perceive.
When Pure White Light passed through a prism we see component colors of
white light, Shorter
MUNSELL wavelengths
DEFINE bend more than
THREE DIMENSION OR longer wavelengths.
QUALITIES FOR COLOR:
1. HUE QUALITY BY WHICH WE DISTINGUISH ONE COLOR FAMILY
Albert Munsell,
FROM feltANOTHER
a need to(describe
VARIETY the
OFcolors
COLOR of).
his sketchesWEin definite
HAVE TENterms to his
HUE students.
COLOR This
FAMILIES;
1. R-RED 2.YR-YELLOW
led to the development of the MunsellGREEN
Color System,
3. Y-YELLOW 4.GY-GREEN YELLOW
which is presently a widely
5. G-GREEN used visual
6.BG-BLUE GREENcolor order
system. He described
7.B-BLUE three dimensions
8.PB-PURPLE of color as
BLUE
hue, chroma,9.and
P-PURPLE
value. 10.RP-REDPURPLE.
EACH OF THESE TEN HUES IS FURTHER SUBDIVIDED INTO TEN
NUMBERED SEGMENTS. THE MIDDLE RED WOULD THUS BE 5R
It is possible to vary each of these qualities without disturbing the other. The
ability to understand each of these dimensions and separate them from one
another is fundamental to an understanding of color as it relates to dentistry.
MUNSELL DEFINE THREE DIMENSION OR
QUALITIES FOR COLOR:
1. Hue Quality by which we distinguish one color family from another
( variety of color ).
We have ten hue color families;
1. R-red 2.YR-yellow green
3. Y-yellow 4.GY-green yellow
5. G-green 6.BG-bluegreen
7.B-blue 8.PB-purple blue
9.P-purple 10.RP-redpurple.
Each of these ten hues is further subdivided into ten numbered
segments. The middle red would thus be 5R
2. Chroma Quality of color by which we distinguish a strong
color from a weak one (the intensity or saturation of hue).
The degree of departure of a color sensation from that of
white or gray ; the intensity of a distinctive hue, color
3. VALUE QUALITY
intensity _Range= 0 – 12
THE VALUE OF A COLOR IS DETERMINED BY WHICH ONE
OF THE GRAYS IT MATCHES ON THE SCALE. COLORS WITH
LOW VALUE NUMBERS ARE TERMED DARK COLORS, AND
ONE WITH HIGH VALUE NUMBERS ARE CALLED LIGHT
COLORS. A BLACK-AND-WHITE TELEVISION TUBE EMITS
ONLYQuality
3. Value A RANGE OF VALUES
by which 9.
we distinguish a light color from a dark one or the
relative brightness of object (lightness or darkness), range from zero to ten,
VALUE
black IS GENERALLY
is zero(0) and white CONSIDERED
is ten (10). TO BE THE MOST
IMPORTANT OF THE THREE DIMENSIONS OF COLOR
• ONE REASON IS THAT LIGHTNESS AND DARKNESS DIFFERENCES ARE
READILY DETECTED BY INDIVIDUALS UNTRAINED IN COLOR
PERCEPTION.
• ANOTHER REASON IS THAT VALUE DIFFERENCES ARE MORE EASILY
3. VALUE QUALITY
The value of a color is determined by which one of the grays
it matches on the scale. Colors with low value numbers are
termed dark colors, and one with high value numbers are
called light colors. A black-and-white televisionTHE
FACTORS INFLUENCE tubeAPPARENT
emits COLOR OF
only a range of values 9.AN OBJECT (TEETH):
1) NATURE OF LIGHT WE HAVE THREE LIGHT SOURCES:
Value is generally considered to be the LIGHT,
INCANDESCENT most important of the LIGHT
FLUORESCENT three dimensions
AND NATURAL of color
DAYLIGHT. MOST DENTAL OFFICES ARE OUTFITTED WITH
• One reason is that lightness and darkness differences are readily detected by
INCANDESCENT AND FLUORESCENT LIGHTS. INCANDESCENT
individuals untrained inLIGHT
color EMITS
perception.
HIGH CONCENTRATION OF YELLOW WAVES
• Another reason is that value differences
MATCHING. are more easilyLIGHT
WHILE, FLUORESCENT detected at aHIGH
EMITS variety of
viewing distances (bothCONCENTRATION
close-up and at aOFdistance),
BLUE WAVES BOTH
whereas OF TWO NOT
differences SUITABLE
in hue and
FOR SHADE MATCHING.
chroma become more difficult to quantify as the viewing distance increases Color of
Human Teeth. CHAIR LIGHT IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR COLOR MATCHING AS IT
IS OVER POWERING AND INTERFERES WITH FINE
FACTORS INFLUENCE THE APPARENT COLOR OF
AN OBJECT (TEETH):
1) Nature ofINFLUENCE
FACTORS light We haveTHEthree light sources:
APPARENT COLOR Incandescent
OF
Light, Fluorescent
AN OBJECT (TEETH):Light and Natural Daylight. Most dental
offices are outfitted with incandescent and fluorescent lights.
2) PHYSICAL Light
Incandescent PROPERTIES OF OBJECTS
Emits high WHENof
concentration LIGHT STRIKES
yellow waves AN
OBJECT, AND ACCORDING TO THE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES SOME
matching. while, Fluorescent Light Emits high concentration of
WAVELENGTHS ARE ABSORBED BY THE OBJECT, WHILE OTHER
blue waves Both of two Not suitable for shade
TRANSFERS THROUGH IT, THE REMAINING ARE REFLECTED
matching.
,COLOR OF AN OBJECT – LIGHT THAT IS ACTUALLY REFLECTED
Chair light
BY THE is not TRUE
OBJECT. recommended for color matchingAND
COLOR CHARACTERISTIC as it is over
APPEARANCE
powering OF DEPTHwith
and interferes TRANSLUCENCY IN A NATURAL
fine discrimination of three TOOTH
CANNOT BE CORRECTLY PERCEIVED UNLESS THE TOOTH IS FREE
dimensions of color Natural Daylight considered the best Closest
OF PLAQUE AND SURFACE STAINS.
to emitting the full spectrum of white light Used as the standard
by which to judge other light sources.
FACTORS INFLUENCE THE APPARENT COLOR OF AN OBJECT (TEETH):
FACTORS INFLUENCE THE APPARENT COLOR OF
AN OBJECT (TEETH):
8. Use of color Contrastors ; The color environment play important role in our
color perception of the grey tooth significantly
9. Shade tap position; Shade tap should be held above the mand tooth or Below
the max tooth to be match and aligned as close as possible to the plane of
orientation of the facial surface Of the tooth being matched.
a) Vita Classic Shade Guide:
Very popular shade guide, Tabs of similar hue are clustered into letter groups;
A (red-yellow) B (yellow) C (grey) D (red-yellow-gray)
More precise shade guide, tooth color divided into 5 levels of value, for each
value group deviation from medium hue towards yellow or red.
In the medium (M) hue there are three levels of color samples for the
chroma , deviation toward more yellowish hues (L) or more reddish hue
(R) exist in 2 chroma
Manufacturer recommended the sequence for shade matching
With the VITA Linearguide 3D-MASTER you can determine the correct tooth
shade swiftly and accurately. The modern design and systematic structure of the
VITA Linearguide enable the appropriate 3D-MASTER shade to be found quickly.
1. Remove the VITA Valueguide 3D-MASTER from the top of the Linearguide. The
correct degree of lightness can now be determined by removing the Valueguide. Make an
initial choice using the Valueguide. In doing so, you determine the correct degree of
lightness 0 to 5.
2. Make a detailed choice within the determined degree of lightness from step 1 using the
corresponding VITA Chroma/Hueguide.
2) Instrumental color analysis (Digital shade-scanning devices)
Digital devices are available that can be used to select the shade
• Tooth should be clean & free of debris
• Need to hold probe perpendicular to tooth
• There is variation in the color depending on where the probe is located
• Tip centered (1 – 2 mm from gingiva and incisal edge) or do 3 zones (gingival,
middle, and incisal)
The advantages of a digital shade-matching system include objective readings and
accuracy.
There are two types of digital shade-matching devices commonly used in
dentistry: 1. spectrophotometer 2. colorimeter
The Spectrophotometer
analyzes the tooth coloration based on preloaded data that is related to a shade
system. It determines the shade tab that is closest to the actual color of the tooth.
The colorimeter is typically less accurate than the spectrophotometer but may
suffice in most dental situations. Because both spectrophotometers and
colorimeters tend to eliminate ambient light by standardizing the immediate
environs of the target tooth, the shade can be taken in any operatory with 8 any
kind of lighting streaming in through the window.
Digital shade taking therefore is far easier, far more practical, and far more accurate
than shade taking using color tabs and the naked eye in a variable environment.
The colorimeter
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THANK YOU
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SO MUCH!
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