Why Dental Photography Is Essential in Modern Dental Practice

By: James Wanamaker, DDS โ€“ IgniteDDS Clinical Coach


In my private practice centered on esthetics and function, dentistry is never just about restoring teeth. Itโ€™s about restoring confidence, improving function, and creating harmony between the teeth, lips, and face.

When you approach dentistry at that level, one tool that becomes absolutely indispensable is dental photography.

Over the years, Iโ€™ve come to view dental photography not as an accessory to treatment but as an essential reality. If we are serious about improving our dentistry, communicating clearly, planning comprehensively, and protecting ourselves legally, photographyโ€”both intraoral and extraoralโ€”must be embedded into the systems of our practice.


1. Photography Improves Clinical Evaluation and Growth

Photography is the most powerful tool we have to evaluate and improve our own work.

When we are in the operatory, our focus tends to be narrow. When we step back and review high-resolution images on a large screen, we:

  • See line angles more critically
  • Notice incisal edge discrepancies
  • Evaluate symmetry and gingival architecture with greater objectivity
  • Identify contouring or polishing areas that need refinement

Photography removes the emotion and stress of the procedure. It allows us to critique ourselves honestlyโ€”and that is where growth happens.

There have been times when Iโ€™ve taken post-case photos and noticed, after the patient has left the building, an area that could use more contouring or polishing. I will then bring the patient back or complete the modification at a recall appointment.

Patients appreciate this attention to detail from photography. It has helped build my practice while also improving my clinical skills.


2. Extraoral Photography Is Essential for Esthetic Planning

Extraoral images allow us to evaluate:

  • Smile design
  • Incisal edge position
  • Buccal corridors
  • Midline cant
  • Tooth display
  • Relationship of the teeth to the lower lip
  • Overall facial proportions

Without extraoral photographs, we cannot properly plan esthetic cases because we cannot fully evaluate how dentistry will influence facial appearance.


3. Photography Transforms Patient Communication and Case Acceptance

Patients rarely understand what we see clinicallyโ€”until we show them.

When patients see their own retracted intraoral images:

  • Cracks become obvious
  • Wear patterns are visible
  • Failing margins are clear

When they see full-face photographs, they begin to understand:

  • Asymmetry
  • Incisal plane discrepancies
  • Lack of tooth display

Photography encourages patients to be part of the diagnostic process. They are no longer being toldโ€”they are being shown.

Often, I will take a photo of something that concerns me, put it on the screen in the treatment room, pause, and wait for the patient to ask how they can address what they see. That shift alone increases understanding and case acceptance.

There is also the legal reality that photography strengthens your record beyond written notes.


4. Photography Elevates Team Communication

Dental photography raises the clinical IQ of the entire office.

When cases are reviewed visually during team meetings or morning huddles:

  • Assistants understand preparation design more clearly
  • Hygienists better recognize wear patterns and occlusal issues
  • Treatment coordinators gain a deeper appreciation for the โ€œwhyโ€ behind comprehensive care

Over time, consistent photographic review aligns everyone around a common standard of excellence.


5. Photography Strengthens Ethical Marketing

Photography plays a powerful role in ethical marketing.

  • Before-and-after images show real results
  • Intraoral photos show the dentistry
  • Extraoral photos show the impact on the person

That emotional connection is what patients respond to most.


Dental Photography Is a System โ€” Not Just a Camera

Dental photography is not about owning an expensive camera. It is about continuously pushing yourself to be better tomorrow than you are today.

If youโ€™re looking to elevate the level of dentistry in your practice, refining your photographic systems is one of the highest-leverage places to start.

Through coaching at IgniteDDS, we work with practices to implement practical, efficient photography workflows that enhance:

  • Diagnosis
  • Communication
  • Case acceptance

All without slowing down production.


Excellence Requires Photography

If we are serious about excellence, photography isnโ€™t optional. It is essential.

James Wanamaker

James Wanamaker

Dr. James Wanamaker earned his Doctor of Dental Surgery degree from SUNY Buffalo School of Dental Medicine in 2016 with a concentration in pediatric dentistry. While at Buffalo, he served in multiple roles in organized dentistry, including the National Chair of the Council on Advocacy for the American Student Dental Association (ASDA). Following dental school, he then completed a General Practice Residency at SUNY Upstate Hospital and the Syracuse VA Hospital. He has completed additional training at the Dawson Academy, Invisalign, and surgical implant placement at the Brighterway Institute. Dr. Wanamaker is a partner in his dream private practice, Smiles of Skaneateles, located outside of Syracuse, NY. Dr. Wanamaker began working with IgniteDDS as a 3rd-year dental student. Since then, he has spoken at dental schools and conferences across the country on interview skills and finding your ideal private practice. He is heavily involved in organized dentistry on a local, state, and national level. Dr. Wanamaker currently serves as the Chair of the New Dentist Committee for the New York State Dental Association. In 2020 Dr. Wanamaker was inducted as a Fellow of the American College of Dentists. Fellows have exemplified excellence through outstanding leadership and exceptional contributions to dentistry and society and only 3% of dentists are Fellows. Dr. Wanamaker resides in Upstate New York with his wife, Francesca, their young daughter, and Goldendoodle, Chewbacca.