Porcelain Crowns near Hughson
Porcelain Crowns for Hughson families
All-porcelain crowns restore broken, worn, or heavily filled teeth to full strength with a result that looks like it grew there. Hughson is generally a fifteen to twenty minute drive from our Turlock office by way of Santa Fe Avenue or Geer Road.
When a tooth loses too much structure to hold a filling, a crown restores what was lost. It covers the entire visible tooth, returning full chewing strength, protecting what remains underneath, and, done well, matching its neighbors so closely that even you will have trouble picking it out.
We work with all-porcelain crowns because they solve the two problems older crowns created. Metal-based crowns often showed a gray line at the gum and could look flat and opaque. Modern ceramics transmit light the way enamel does, and they are contoured to follow your gumline naturally. Several of the transformations in our smile gallery involve exactly this: replacing older, poorly contoured crowns with all-porcelain restorations shaped to match the gumline and the surrounding teeth.
From the Fruit and Nut Festival to Friday night games, Hughson keeps its small-town heart, and its families fit right in at our practice, where dentistry still comes with a first-name welcome. For the complete guide to this treatment, including the full process, benefits, and costs, visit our main Porcelain Crowns page.
Why Hughson patients choose our Turlock office
- Restores full strength to broken, worn, or root canal treated teeth
- All-porcelain construction with no gray metal line at the gum
- Contoured to match your gumline and neighboring teeth
- Protects and preserves the natural tooth underneath
Common questions
Where do Hughson patients go for porcelain crowns?
How do I know if I need a crown or just a filling?
Will the crown look natural?
How should I care for a crown?
Porcelain Crowns, a short drive from Hughson
New patients are always welcome. Call (209) 667-0115 or request an appointment online, and our scheduling coordinator will take it from there.