Archive for April, 2009

Celeb Style Watch – Post Easter 2009

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Put down the dregs of those choccie eggs, pop on your neon sandals and get set for Summer! What have our fave celebs been out in this week?

Brad Pitt – Don’t we wish we really knew what was going on behind closed doors chez Brangalina? What we do know is how to get their sunnie style – Brad in cool squared off avaitors, with a lush shiny bridge.

Cindy Crawford – Wandering along a beach in California looking amazing in a bikini, and a very cool pair of huge aviator shades. Shame she was hiding them under a really cool huge hat!

Sienna Miller – Rocking the retro look in classic Wayfarer shaped sunnies. A popular style since the 1950s – Sienna knows a style to stick with.

Kylie – Taking her new man to meet the Parents, playing golf in plastic aviator shades! As usual, Kylie manages that twist on a classic.

Nicole Ritchie – Bucking the trend in huge round black sunnies. Nice shape to compliment that cute little baby bump!

Steve’s Weird Week!

Monday, April 27th, 2009

I’ve had a very weird week, feeling ever so slightly drunk for the last two days, without the joy of a drop passing my lips! Let me share with you the joy of my new varifocal glasses……

At forty three I started to notice that I was really squinting to see small print, the clincher being the fancy writing on the local gastro pub menu. I struggled on for a while, borrowing my wife’s groovy leopard print reading glasses, before admitting defeat and having an eye test. I’m ok for driving, but the optician agreed that I needed help with reading.

I thought about new glasses for a month or so, finding it difficult to make a decision about what lenses I should have. Messing around in an online optician site, I found I could try varifocals at a really low price, and send them back if I didn’t like them. So I went for it and got them last Friday.

They felt really strange when I first put them on, but the online optician told me to persevere, and try to get on with my reading, computer work etc. They felt odd when I looked to the side, but after the first two days I even liked them wearing them in the car, because I can see the dash board. They’re great for reading, and at the computer, and I think I’ve cracked it, now I’ve stopped feeling a bit sea sick in them.

Today I can type without feeling spaced out, and I think I’ll get a second pair to keep at work. I really miss that leopard look frame though……..

Changes For The Better

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Now some sunshine has finally seen off the gloom of winter, you thoughts may be turning to summer wear, and more specifically, summer eye wear. You can have clear specs and sunglasses, but have you considered lenses that change in the sunlight? Photochromic lenses adapt to the light conditions, going dark if sunlight – and therefore UV is present.

Corning first invented this miracle glass over thirty five years ago. Silver Halide crystals within the lens material change colour when exposed to UV. The lenses don’t change indoors under bright light, (some people worry that they’ll look like undercover rock stars wearing their sunglasses inside!) outdoors they go as dark as sunglasses when you need them.

From the original glass photochromics we now have an array of different products and manufacturers, and this type of lens is now as successful in plastic as it is in glass. The ideal lens needs to change instantly when you step from dark to light and back again. There is always a very light tint on the lenses even when indoors, but on nowadays this is very pale.

The most popular colours are grey and brown, which are usually matched to the frame. The only real problem with these lenses is that the colour does alter over time, so if you ever chip one, both need to be re-ordered. They also always look dark on photos – so if you’re at a wedding be prepared for the Mafia boss look! These little glitches aside, photochromics may be the perfect for you this Summer – as long as the sun does shine on us!

Fire Up That Quattro!

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Ashes to Ashes is back – and our thoughts turn to dodgy stonewashed jeans, white leather jackets and other iconic 80’s items of clothing. The music was great but the look left a lot to be desired……..especially the eyewear!

If in the eighties we thought our hair, shoulder pads and lapels were big, we really went for it with our glasses. For girls the fashion was huge round plastic frames  – with lots of colour but not the detail we see on trendy eyewear today. Colours were solid brights or more translucent materials which blended colours into one another. We even had funky clear plastics with fabric inlaid in them, to add pattern.

A cool look was a coloured tint that matched the frame, so for instance we saw lots of blue frames with bright blue lenses, or yellow and green tints were also popular. If coloured frames were not for you, then there was always white, delicious teamed with graduated tints that faded from grey or pink.  Rimless eyewear was huge too – and the lenses were brightly tinted and cut into facetted shapes.

For men it was the Aviator shape, squared off or in an exaggerated teardrop, in bright shiny gold, silver or black. Nearly all frames had a double bridge bar, or for you hippy types there was still the ‘John Lennon’ frame, the iconic rolled gold NHS frame, very thin metal and very round. Eyewear was thicker and heavier in those days, so not only were your specs highly camp but you had a big dent in your nose. Good job Gene Hunt makes it all look so cool…………

Double Trouble

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Most of us know about bifocal glasses lenses – they have a segment cut into the bottom of the lens that lets you see for reading, while the top of the lens gives you clear vision for distance. Did you know though, that there’s more to bifiocals than meets the eye – let us tell you about some of the more unusual circumstances in which these versatile lenses have been used.

We had a message from an electrician, using his glasses at work for wiring – and he couldn’t see if he was working on wiring positioned above his head. We made upside down bifocals, putting the reading area at the top of the lens, and a weaker area below so he could see when he stepped onto his ladder – problem solved!

We then heard from a Doctor who felt he intimidated his patients when he looked at them over the top of his reading half frames, which he used to input records in the computer. We made bifocals with a clear top portion, and a weak prescription in the bottom, just enough to use at the computer. No more nervous patients!

A chap with an arthritic neck was having difficulty seeing the edges of his workbench in his varifocals  – these 3-in-1 lenses are great for general purpose wear but some people struggle when they look to the sides. We made extra wide segment bifocals that allowed him to look around without straining his neck too much.

There’s always a solution to every problem if you look hard enough – and with bifocals you can look twice as hard!!

Being Long-Sighted

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Of all the afflictions that can befall us, you’d think that long-sightedness is a fairly minor thing. I’m not blind as a bat, I can see with my specs on, I should be counting my blessings. For me though, my eye defect has been a real blight on my life……

When I was little I was quite severely bullied, because my confidence was poor due to wearing glasses. They were thick, heavy, and worst of all they magnified my eyes. Looking back at photos, I was engulfed by these big specs with my huge eyes behind them.

I wore contact lenses as soon as I could, but when I was pregnant and breast feeding my hormones affected my eyes and I couldn’t wear lenses. The happy time with my new baby was almost spoilt by the thought of wearing specs again. I was so traumatised that I couldn’t cope with the thought of choosing glasses at the Opticians.

I trawled through loads of online optician sites while breast feeding at night, steeling myself to get some glasses. I found a site I could e-mail and phone, and they were really helpful about my prescription lenses. I got lenses called aspherics which are light and flat and don’t magnify my eyes. For the first time in twenty years I have specs which I actually like wearing. If my baby has to wear glasses it’s great to know she won’t ever have to deal with the trauma that mine used to cause me.

Specs Super Heroes!

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Su Pollard has been in the news in the last couple of weeks, as attention has been brought to her individual clothes sense. We applaud those who dare to be different – and who wouldn’t wear red lace tights and a denim ra ra skirt if they had legs like Sus! Well we always admired Su for her stunning eyewear – she can do funky plastic frames like no other – well almost…..

Any glasses frame with a vaguely upswept shape can be described as a ‘Dame Edna’ another Celeb famed for her outlandish eyewear. Who could forget the frames with the Sydney Opera House across the top of them?  Who would want to remember them?!

Timmy Mallet returned to the public eye last year thanks to ‘I’m a Celebrity’. He used to rival Su for the biggest, most colourful frames around. Nothing was too outlandish for Timmy – and when we saw him in the jungle we were pleased to see he hadn’t changed…

The other iconic specs wearer we could never forget was that screen siren from Coronation Street, delicious Deirdre. While she was wowing Ken she was wowing us with her eyewear. The glasses got bigger as the plot got hotter, and many of look back fondly on our Deirdre days.

Nowadays things are positively staid with the likes of Anne Robinson sporting very stylish specs, and even Dr Who doesn’t wear anything out of this world. Thank goodness Su is back in the news!

Special Specs

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

You may put your glasses on and see them as a necessary evil, just a bit of wire and two lumps of glass. You may have never given a thought to this simple appliance, even though they make the world a better, brighter place for you. Did you know just how special glasses can be? Did you know what wonderful and wacky specs there are available?

If you have a hankering to be the next big thing at the snooker table, then there are special specs just for you. Snooker frames have huge lenses which sit above the brow line – this means you can see when you are looking down the table. They also have special tilted lenses to enable you to make that killer shot!

Recumbent spectacles are useful if you are laying in bed due to illness, injury or hangover. They have prisms within the lenses which mean that even when you are laying flat you can see at the same angle as if you were sitting up. They look a bit odd but it’s fun making people guess what they’re for!

Make up spex have prescription lenses which flip down singly, meaning you can move one out of the way to make up that eye while looking through the lens on the other side. Just remember not to keep them on when you go out!

Back To Black

Monday, April 20th, 2009

We all know that in recent fashion seasons everything has been the new black, from grey to yellow and back again. Has black become boring? Easy? A uniform for anyone who thinks they’re cool and stylish? Now that detail and embellishment has become so popular in eyeglasses, maybe it’s time to take another look at black…

Black is a classic colour that can be cool for career wear and elegant for evening. Girls can now take that eternally chic look and give it a noughties twist. You can go for frames with a hint of decoration in a tiny sprinkling of crystals, or full on with as much bling as you dare. This can brighten up that LBD or give some personality to a smart black work suit. Check out frames by Christian Dior or Marc Jacobs.

Men needn’t be left out – laminated, sandwiched plastics will give interest and cool techno detail to otherwise simple frames, and let your personality shine through. Or you can choose plain black rims with clear layers to make the look less heavy, or a frame lined with a flash of colour. Take a look at Gucci or Hugo Boss.

Black can be dramatic with all colouring, although autumn colour toned skins may be better with dark brown for a similar but more flattering effect. It will enhance dark hair and skin tones or stand out in chic style with fairer colouring. Just don’t dismiss black as boring – the time has come to go back to black…..

I Can See Clearly Now!

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

After years of glasses abuse and spending half my time in the Opticians, waiting for my glasses to be repaired or going in to collect ones I’ve discovered a whole new world – thank you online optician for ending years of torment……

I got glasses when I became short sighted at age twelve. I’d been squinting for a while and my dad was in such despair over my lack of skills on the cricket pitch that he was willing to try anything. A trip to the Optician and then came the news that every kid dreads – you are now officially a geek and target for stray footballs.

At school my glasses got sat on, eaten by the dog, left on buses, crunched when I put them in my trainers for safe keeping. (You can guess the rest. To add injury to insult I cut my toe on the broken lens.) One pair fell overboard from a ferry on a day trip to France, one pair fell out of the door pocket in the car and Mum drove over them.

At work my cool rimless specs got squashed when some other short sighted idiot to vain to wear their glasses put a box on them. I left one pair on top of the car, and a girlfriend took another because she liked the frames so much.

When I discovered online glasses the world became a better place. I got five pairs, not much dearer than the ones I left on the car, and now I’m never without spex. I also don’t have the indignity of glasses repaired with sellotape, plasters, safety pins, garden twine or Blu-tak. Now I just need to remember where I put them….