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Expert
Eyeglass Lenses Tips
Reducing Eye Distortions
The aspheric eyeglasses lens has flatter curves than a
conventional eyeglass lens and is positioned closer to the
face. If you are wearing a strong correction lens, this
will make your eyes look normal size, flattering their
shape.
Conventional farsighted eyeglass lenses enlarge the eyes,
making them look overly large, while a nearsighted
eyeglasses lens gives your eye a piggy or beady look. The
thinnest eyeglass lenses usually have thin edges for
strong minus or nearsighted prescriptions. The thinner
edges also flatter your eyes and face.
For people with multiple vision problems, an aspheric
multifocal or progressive eyeglass lens shows off those
beautiful green eyes while improving eyesight.
Sports Lenses
The polycarbonate eyeglasses lens keeps parents from
breaking their budget replacing eyeglasses. If the scratch-proof
UV-protected polycarbonate eyeglass lens can withstand a
rough-and-tumble day at school, your polycarbonate
eyeglass lenses can hold up under the pressure of a squash
game. They are the thinnest eyeglass lenses designed for
athletics.
A caveat: Only use polycarbonate eyeglass lenses in an
approved sports glasses frame. A regular designer eyeglass
frame may be fine for a progressive eyeglass lens, but won't
weather the impact of a football tackle.

Golf Lenses
Bifocal golf eyeglass lenses trump the progressive
eyeglass lens on the course. Flat-top bifocals in the low
inside corner of the eyeglass lenses of golf glasses allow
you to read and write on the scorecard up close, but still
hit the ball into the cup. While golf eyeglass lenses aren't
the thinnest eyeglass lens on the market, the extra
bifocal eyeglasses lens will help you keep your eye on
your score and the ball! You may not become Greg Norman or
Arnold Palmer overnight, but your game can improve with a
bifocal eyeglasses lens.
Concave or Convex, Go High-Index
Whether your eyeglasses lens is concave to correct
nearsightedness or convex to prevent farsightedness,
traditional corrective eyeglass lenses have thicker edges.
In fashionable eyeglasses such as ICU Eyewear and in
Calvin Klein eyeglass frames, the rims are thinner than
the eyeglass lens. Rimless eyeglasses leave the thick
eyeglasses lens completely exposed, giving your specs a
bizarre appearance.
The progressive eyeglass lens, the aspheric thinnest
eyeglass lenses, and especially high-index eyeglass lenses
can bend light more, so are thinner and lighter since they
require less surface material.
Advanced Myopia Prescription Lenses
If you have a -6.00 prescription, you have extreme myopia!
But your minus prescription number shouldn't mean you have
to subtract a lot of cash from your bank account, or
suffer with a heavy concave eyeglass lens. An aspheric
high-index thin eyeglasses lens or an aspheric progressive
eyeglass lens can stand up to your advanced myopia and
have you singing, “I can see clearly now...I can see all
obstacles in my way...”
Another choice for thinnest eyeglass lenses are
polycarbonate, also known as featherweight, eyeglass
lenses, which you can wear in regular eyeglass frames if
you're not doing sports.
Aspheric Lenses
Aspheric eyeglass lenses are designed to rest lightly on
the face and provide superior optical function. However,
even though aspheric eyeglass lenses are among the
thinnest eyeglass lenses, they can't counterbalance heavy
frames. Wearing coke-bottle frames with aspheric eyeglasse
lenses is like wearing your baggy clothes after you've
lost a lot of weight. In general, the aspheric eyeglasses
lens should be in a smaller eyeglass frame such as ICU
Eyewear's matte two-tone thin lozenge-shaped frame. Your
aspheric progressive eyeglass lens works well in a larger
rounded frame such as the one found on ICU's Bi-Focal
O85BF.
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