I Found Out Exactly What My Dental Hygienist Uses to Whiten Her Teeth
And It Works So Well, I Almost Cried When My Wedding Photos Came Back
I was about to spend $400 on professional teeth whitening for my wedding when my hygienist told me what she uses to keep her own teeth sparkling white, for thirty dollars. I cancelled the appointment that night.
But let me back up. I've been drinking two cups of coffee every morning since college. I'm thirty-five. Thirteen years of coffee on my teeth. They're not damaged. They're not rotten. They're just yellow, and it gets worse every year.
I tried Crest Whitestrips once. They're these thin plastic strips you stick to your teeth. You're supposed to wear them every day for two weeks. I lasted three days. By the third morning, room-temperature water made me flinch. My teeth felt like someone stuck ice needles in them. I threw the rest of the box under the bathroom sink and never touched it again.
I tried charcoal toothpaste after that. ZERO results (just a gray sink). A whitening pen from Walgreens leaked in my bag after four days of nothing. After that, I stopped trying.
Then we got engaged.
There's a photo from our engagement shoot, eight months ago. I'm actually smiling in it, and the first thing I saw was my teeth. You know that feeling when you look at a photo and your eyes go straight to the thing you were hoping wouldn't show? I asked the photographer if she could "warm up the tones" on half the gallery. She knew exactly what I meant. I never posted the full set. I can share it now because those aren't my teeth anymore, thank god. It's still a hard photo to look at, but you can see what I mean.
That was the last time I showed my teeth in a photo. After that it was the closed-mouth smile, every single time. My fiancé would tell me to "actually smile" and I'd say I was smiling. If someone posted a picture of me on Facebook, the first thing I'd check was whether my teeth were showing.
Then I did the math on a wedding. Hundreds of photos. Photos that get framed. Photos that end up on my grandkids' wall someday. An entire day where the one thing you're supposed to do, all day, in front of everyone you know, is smile.
That's what finally pushed me. I called my dental office and booked the $400 in-office whitening. Not money I could just throw around five months before a wedding, but I was done messing around with drugstore products that didn't work.
The appointment was two weeks out. But first, I had my regular cleaning.
I've had the same hygienist for three years. Lisa. She's friendly but professional. She asks about the wedding planning, remembers my fiancé's name. The kind of person who makes the dentist feel less like the dentist.
She hadn't put her mask on yet, and I noticed her teeth.
They were white. Not fake-looking, just bright and clean in a way that made me look twice. She was maybe fifty, and her teeth were whiter than mine have ever been in my life.
"You have really nice teeth," I said. It came out before I thought about it.
She laughed. "Thank you."
"No, seriously. They're really white. Do you get the whitening done here? I actually just booked mine. The wedding's in five months."
She didn't answer right away. When she did, she kept her voice low.
"I probably shouldn't be telling you this."
"Everything we do here, it's all peroxide. Same thing that's in the strips at the drugstore, just stronger."
I nodded. I'd heard this before.
"I set up those trays for patients three, four times a week. I apply the gel. I monitor them through it."
She paused again.
"I would never use it on my own teeth."
I just looked at her.
"A lot of the people I do this on have a rough time with it. And afterward, some of them can't eat for a day or two. The results fade. People come back for touch-ups every few months. It's good money for the practice." She glanced toward the back. "We've had reps come in with products that don't cause the sensitivity. But the stuff costs next to nothing. There's not much money in it for us."
Then she said the thing that actually got me: "If your wedding's in five months and you bleach now, you'll probably be paying for a touch-up the week before anyway."
"So what do you use?" I asked.
A $29 powder.
She said it the way you'd say you use a certain brand of dish soap. No drama.
"It's a powder. You just brush with it. Takes two minutes."
I looked at her teeth again. Bright. Healthy. The kind of teeth I'd been saving on Pinterest boards next to dresses and centerpieces. And she'd been using this for two years.
She told me the name. PurelyWHITE Deluxe.
"About thirty dollars," she said. "I order mine from their website."
When I first heard "whitening powder," I thought of that charcoal mess from Instagram. She shook her head. "This is not that. Charcoal scrubs the surface of your teeth. This works completely differently."
I asked her to explain.
She kept it simple. "Everything we sell here and everything on the drugstore shelf, it all bleaches. That's why it hurts, that's why it fades, and over time it actually thins your enamel. This doesn't bleach. It puts a mineral back into your teeth, the same one they're already made of, instead of stripping one out."
She smiled a little. "My teeth look better than what most of my patients walk out with after the bleach. And I just brush with a powder." She put her mask on after that and started the cleaning.
The math I did that night.
I kept thinking about Lisa's teeth. I'd been staring at them from eight inches away. Those weren't strip results. Those weren't bleached. They were just healthy.
In-office whitening: $400. Per session. Most people need touch-ups every few months — which for me meant paying twice before the wedding.
Crest Whitestrips: $50 a box. I threw mine away after three days.
The powder: $29.99. One jar lasts about two months.
I cancelled the whitening appointment.
I went to their website instead and ordered a jar. It showed up three days later.
My first two weeks.
I used it that night. I dipped my toothbrush in, brushed for two minutes, rinsed.
The first thing I noticed: nothing hurt.
No zing. No sensitivity. Nothing. Not during, not after, not the next morning with my coffee. After the strips, I'd braced myself for the pain. It never came.
The second thing: I looked in the mirror and something was already different. The surface looked cleaner - brighter. I stood there actually staring at my own teeth.
By the end of week one they were noticeably whiter. Not "maybe if I tilt toward the light" whiter. Actually whiter. I kept finding excuses to check.
By week two my teeth were white again. Thirteen years of coffee and they were white again. I took a selfie. I don't take selfies. I sent it to my maid of honor and just said 'look.' She called me twenty seconds later.
My next cleaning.
Three months later, regular cleaning. Lisa called me back, tilted me into the chair, and looked at my teeth.
She smiled after a moment. "You ordered it, didn't you?"
I nodded.
"Your teeth look really good." She leaned back. "Whatever you're doing, keep doing it. You're going to look great up there."
Coming from her, that meant a lot.
The wedding.
The photos came back two weeks ago.
I'm smiling in every single one. Actually smiling. Teeth showing. The getting-ready photos, the ceremony, the photo of me laughing during my dad's toast where you can see basically every tooth I own. I didn't ask the photographer to fix anything.
My husband's grandmother pulled me aside at the reception and asked if I'd "had my teeth done" for the wedding. She meant veneers. Actual cosmetic dental work.
Thirty dollars.
It wasn't just me.
When I went looking for other people's experiences, the same things kept coming up.
The product itself is amazing! After three uses my teeth have made a dramatic change. My teeth are also very sensitive prone, and I've have yet to have an issue!
This was my first ever purchase from this company and they still haven't given me a reason to be dissatisfied with my order.
If you're thinking about getting it yourself, it's definitely worth the money!!
First of all I got this for a great price and noticed results after just one use which is exactly what I wanted!
No sensitivity, and instant white results! I love love purely white!!!!!
My teeth are so white it is insane !!! I never used to want to smile, but now I can !! The results are amazing and so quick!! Do yourself a favor and get yourself this whitening powder!
So far I'm loving this product! Arrived quick and super easy to use. I can't wait to see how white my teeth get for my wedding! So much easier then whitening strips too!!
I love this product. I took a break and just decided to buy it again b/c I missed it & it just always does an amazing job & gives so much more confidence knowing you have beautiful white teeth.
Over and over: real results, no pain, and half of them saying they wish they'd found it sooner.
Would I recommend it?
Yes. Yes, a thousand times yes. I already have. My maid of honor, two of my bridesmaids, anyone who asks. My sister-in-law saw the wedding photos last month and pulled me aside. She thought I'd gotten veneers too. That's two people now.
Thirteen years of coffee on my teeth, and this is the only thing I've tried that actually worked. No pain, no sensitivity, thirty dollars instead of four hundred. Real changes within two weeks. And five months later, on the one day it mattered most, they still looked the same.
I've looked around since then. The most popular brand doing something similar charges $119 for a kit.
PurelyWHITE Deluxe is $29.99. I order from their website.
Think about it. Lisa does professional whitening on patients all day long. She could get it done on herself for free, whenever she wanted, on her lunch break. She uses a thirty-dollar powder instead.
That told me everything I needed to know.
They also back it with a money-back guarantee. So if it doesn't work for you, you're not out anything. At $29.99 with a guarantee, I honestly don't know why anyone would still book the $400 appointment first.
If you have a wedding coming up — yours, your kid's, anyone's — or you've just been putting this off, stop. I put it off through an entire engagement shoot. My only regret is that those photos exist.