Meet the People Behind the Smiles
Built by a Lab That Understands the Chairside Grind
Our team is small by design, tight-knit, hands-on, and fully invested in what we do. Everyone here plays a direct role in designing, crafting, and refining the full arch restorations we deliver. We’re not just technicians. We’re problem-solvers, artists, and collaborators who understand how much trust you’re placing in us with every case. Each person on our team brings something unique to the table, but we all share the same goal: to help you deliver a prosthetic that fits, functions, and lasts the first time.

Matthew – CAD/CAM Designer and All-Around Tech Wizard
Matthew was our very first hire, and he’s been part of the foundation ever since. From surgical conversions to final zirconia designs, he’s touched every part of the process and probably fixed a printer or two along the way. When he’s not designing arches, he’s deep into gaming or troubleshooting something IT-related for the team. Basically, if it’s technical and complicated, Matthew’s your guy. If it’s not, he’ll probably figure it out anyway.

Bryson – CAD/CAM designer and Smile ArchiTech
With over five years of dental tech experience and enough energy to power the whole lab, Bryson is the first set of eyes on every case. He handles everything from surgical conversions and pre-design setups to coordinating with doctors and checking records for accuracy. If something’s missing, Bryson will catch it and probably crack a joke while he’s at it.

Lisle – Zirconia Finisher and Smile Artist
Lisle has a natural gift for bringing beauty into the world whether it’s through her artistic hobbies or the final touches on a zirconia arch. Her artistic eye and steady hands help transform digital designs into something that is truly special. As the owner’s daughter-in–law, Lisle isn’t just part of the team she’s part of the heart behind it. Every smile she helps create is a reflection of the care she puts into everything she does.

Julian - Dental Technician and Prosthetic Engineer
Julian is the hands behind the scenes: running the mills, green-stating, cementing, metal work, and dialing in every technical detail that goes into a beautiful final prosthetic. As the owner’s son (and Lisle’s husband), this work runs deep and it shows. Quiet, focused, and fiercely reliable, Julian’s the one you want next to you when things get real. And most days, he’s exactly that: our right hand.

Michael - Digital Designer and Smile Machinist
Michael plays a key role in designing full arch prosthetics at DIGITAL SMILE SOLUTIONS, blending digital precision with hands-on manufacturing insight. His passion for technology fuels constant improvements to our milling process, helping every smile come out smoother, faster, and more precise. When he’s not in the lab, he’s at the piano, writing, or tinkering with his motorcycle, always chasing the next challenge.

Mari – Office Manager
Mari is the operational backbone of DIGITAL SMILE SOLUTIONS. From timelines to tracking numbers, she keeps every case moving and every detail accounted for. As the founder’s partner in both life and business, she’s been with DIGITAL SMILE SOLUTIONS since day one helping build the systems and structure that keep everything running smoothly. She’s the kind of person who double-checks the double-check and still manages to stay calm when things get chaotic. Outside the lab, you’ll probably find her organizing something… just because she enjoys it.
Lenny, CDT - Founder
Lenny is a Certified Dental Technician with over 25 years of experience in the dental field and the founder of DIGITAL SMILE SOLUTIONS. With a background that blends hands-on lab expertise and deep IT knowledge, he’s spent his career bridging the gap between digital design and real-world clinical success, including over 2 decades of old-school benchwork. Having worked closely with doctors for decades, Lenny understands the chairside challenges they face and built DIGITAL SMILE SOLUTIONS to be the kind of lab he always wished existed: responsive, precise, and truly collaborative.
