Refresh
Your Smile.
Most cosmetic dentistry doesn't change a face — it returns one to itself. The chip you covered. The shade you used to be. The crowding you'd almost forgotten was there.
Refresh is the lighter end of the work we do: composite bonding, clear aligners, whitening — done by clinicians who treat the rest of the mouth, not just the front of it. Plans you can stop at any point. Outcomes that still look like you.

The brief, almost always, is "still me."
When patients show us photos for inspiration, the conversation we have isn't about the photo — it's about which parts of it they actually want, and which they don't. The answer is rarely whiter, brighter, straighter. It's usually subtler than that.
So that's how we plan: shade-matched to the rest of your teeth, sized to the rest of your face, and reversible where we can. Bonding before veneers. Aligners before crowns. The smallest intervention that gets you to the place you've been picturing.
Four cosmetic treatments, considered.
Cosmetic Dentistry
The full cosmetic range — bonding, aligners, whitening — and which combination is right for you.
Composite Bonding
Same-day reshaping for chips, gaps and worn edges. Additive, reversible, no drilling.
Aligners
Clear aligners with every step monitored in person — not posted out and forgotten.
Teeth Whitening
A brighter smile that still looks like yours — not the bathroom-tile shade you fear.
The smallest thing that gets you there.
We don't prep teeth we don't need to. We don't recommend veneers when bonding will hold. We don't brighten beyond a shade that fits your face. The cosmetic plan we write is the smallest plan that gets you to the smile you came in for — because the smaller the work, the more reversible it is.
Whitening usually comes first. Aligners next, if we need them. Bonding last, sized and shaded to the new arrangement. Patients are sometimes surprised by how little it takes — and how much it changes.
Questions we hear before you'd commit.
Not on our work. We shade-match in person, not from a photo, and try-in before we finish. The most common reaction we get is patients' partners not realising anything has been done — which, for cosmetic dentistry, is the correct outcome.
