Posts Tagged ‘semi-rimless glasses’

Eyes in Disguise!

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

When we’re talking to customers about choosing new glasses, many ladies (and a few men!) mention the problem of the under eye area. The stresses and strains of everyday life, late nights, smoking, alcohol, can all affect your skin. These factors contribute to dark circles, bags under the eyes, puffy areas and crows feet. Before you go under the Surgeons knife, have a think about what you can do in your choice of frames to help resolve the problem…

Firstly, a few lifestyle changes will benefit the under eye area and help you feel healthier generally. Smoking dulls your skin and can lead to the early onset of Age Related Macular Degeneration, so give up!! Drink more water, get plenty of sleep and work on your five-a-day of fruit and veg, boring but you’ll be more beautiful! Secondly shop around and try out some skin products. Don’t overload the delicate eye area, and never use heavy face creams around the eyes. Use specific products and pat in very gently – your ring finger will be the gentlest. Don’t drag the skin and remove all traces of make up before you go to sleep.

Make up around this area should be light and very well blended. Scrutinise your eyes and make sure eyeliner etc is kept soft and there are no hard edges. A sweep of a highlighter such as the iconic YSL Touche Eclat will reflect light back and camouflage problem areas. Bobbi Brown’s Tinted Eye Brightener is another great product that soothes the skin and will help to lighten dark shadows.

When you choose your new frames, go shallow, so that the under eye area is not within your frames, where it will be enhanced by the lenses! If you are long sighted your lenses will magnify the eyes, so choose a flatter lens. Make sure the bottom rim covers the lower edge of any baggy bits or wrinkles! Rimless or semi-rimless glasses will just add another set of lines and draw attention to shadows. Go for a bold rim in plastic or metal, that will draw attention to the frame and your eyes within it, not the area round the eye.

The Long & The Short of It

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

My husband and I had an interesting time this week, unravelling the mysteries of online optician ordering. We thought we were fairly savvy shoppers, but we realised we needed some advice when it came to buying glasses. After a few mails back and forth to the IGC’s customer service dept, and we’re now sorted, so we thought we’d share our new found knowledge.

My prescription is quite different to my husbands, a fact we’ve always been aware of as we can’t share glasses! I’m minus 4 ish in each eye, he is plus 3.5 and 4.75. Love really must be blind! Apparently, short and long sighted people have different issues when it comes to choosing spec frames, so this was a learning curve for us.

My husband wanted semi-rimless glasses, but this flagged up a potential problem with his lenses. We were told that if you’re long sighted the edges of your lenses are very thin – and if they make them thicker it makes the middle of the lens thick, and husband hates that magnified eye look he gets if his lenses are thick. A semi-rimless exposes the edges of the lenses, so this could make them prone to chipping. He also picked quite a wide frame, and the bigger shape increases the eye magnification.

I chose a big shape because I wanted a dark lens to wear as sunglasses. This was flagged up because with my lens power the lenses are thick on the edge, and the bigger my lens shape the more thickness I get. We were disappointed that we couldn’t have our choices, but pleased that there were explanations and advice for this.

I decided that even if the edges were thicker it wouldn’t bother me, as the tint would disguise it. The IGC agreed with me, and now that I’ve got them, I’m glad I was warned, and I’m happy with them. My husband decided to get a smaller frame with a full rim. We tried some at home first, and picked a pretty funky pair!! We’re pleased with those too, they’re cool and the lenses look really good. The advice helped us to make informed choices, and I was really glad that the orders weren’t just done, as we had the chance to pick products that were better for us.