The smile that everyone wants is no longer perfect

A new trend arises among Japanese girls, and dental clinics change their policies to please the client, would you deform your smile to be fashionable?

What is yaeba? In general, the term refers to the crowded placement of the teeth, and especially the upper canines, with an unusual protrusion similar to that of fangs, causing them to protrude from the alignment of the teeth to rest on the lips.

For its part, Tsuke Yaeba it is nothing more than the cosmetic imitation by local dentists of this much-desired natural trait. So many years of braces to avoid smiling like a rabbit and you had the solution just around the continent.

They are not followers of vampire subcultures those who choose to imitate this effect, but young women, between their teens and twenties, followers of the latest fashion trends and with a marked interest in everything that arouses tenderness. Such is the interest in this segment that many clinics have packages with special prices for students who, from a few 40 eurosget the irregular teeth of the moment.

Read also: Discover what your smile can reflect

If you have doubts about the procedure, you can see a video of the technique below:

Watch video

The scope of the trend is such that the casting has even been carried out to form a music group with exclusively Yaeba components, TYB48. The three components of it were chosen in a dental center based on their smile, One more step in musical casting?

Perhaps the most interesting thing is the debate that has arisen around this trend and the meaning behind this aesthetic sign, with some arguing that it sexualizes girls, while others argue that it is a symbol of pre-pubescent youth.

Taking into account the Eastern canons of attraction, opposed in many aspects to the Western ones, and the fact that the ideal of beauty in both sexes is based on not having signs of sexual maturity, we are more inclined because the Tsuke Yaeba alludes to a state of childhoodin which the teeth have not yet lost their milk teeth or the jaw is not sufficiently developed to support the size of the permanent teeth…

Taken from Vanity