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We are committed to selling authentic, name-brand children's prescription glasses to suit a wide variety of lifestyles and budgets. features ultra-fashionable children's eyeglasses from Lafont and Ray-Ban, and sporty styles from Converse and Nike. This means that every kid, from future fashionistas to up-and-coming athletes, can find the right eye glasses for them. (Also see Childrens Sunglasses & Childrens Prescription Sunglasses.) Why is it important to buy high-quality glasses for kids? Eyeglasses are a critical part of your child's life because they help your child see the world more clearly. Most kids wear their glasses all day, every day. This means that you need your child's glasses to be comfortable and the prescription lenses to be precise. Uncomfortable, ill-fitting, or inaccurate children's eyeglasses can cause problems like headaches and blurred vision and can make it difficult to read, judge depth, or even drive. This is why it is important to buy quality children's eyeglasses whose lenses are created in a reputable lab with several years of experience.




offers a wide variety of quality children's eyeglasses as well as a knowledgeable and experienced staff of certified opticians who can help you decide which eyeglasses for kids will provide you with the most comfortable fit while still staying true to your child's personal style. also guarantees 100% accuracy on all orders and prescriptions. Each prescription eyeglass order undergoes a six-step quality-control process, including verification with digital lens technology, to ensure that your prescription lenses made with unparalleled accuracy. Ray-Ban Junior RY1531 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1530 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1536 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1528 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1535 EyeglassesNike 5532 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeRay-Ban Junior RY1544 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1562 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1549 EyeglassesLiberty Sport MAXX 20 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeLiberty Sport MAXX 30 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeDolce & Gabbana DG3231 EyeglassesPrice-Match Guarantee




Ray-Ban Junior RY1531 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1528 EyeglassesNike 5532 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeRay-Ban Junior RY1544 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1562 EyeglassesRay-Ban Junior RY1549 EyeglassesLiberty Sport MAXX 20 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeLiberty Sport MAXX 30 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeJuicy Couture Juicy 909 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeJuicy Couture Juicy 913 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeDolce & Gabbana DG3231 EyeglassesPrice-Match GuaranteeDolce & Gabbana DG3202 - Almond Flowers EyeglassesPrice-Match Guarantee Also see: Things to Know about Eyeglasses for Kids | Eyeglass Lens Types for Children | Contact Lenses for Children | Vision Prescriptions for Babies – How?Halfway between this year’s Valentine’s Day and next year’s, our cute DUPLO Valentine’s hearts are still full of love. So we thought, how can we turn these hearts into something that will remind us to see the world through loving eyes all year round? You build these stylish spectacles, groovy goggles and highly fashionable frames, of course!




You can use these examples as inspiration or customize them to your own style. Use any and every color you want, and show the world a little love. Some adults we have tested them on also claimed the glasses helped them see things through the eyes of a child. We would love to test that across a larger group of people, so feel free to share your experiences on Facebook. This post was tagged with: After successfully repairing a broken hinge, I decided to add some stylish element to my glasses, and replace the original branding by another famous branding: LEGO! (This method may not apply the same way to any glasses. It depends on how the hinge is made.) Step 1: Needed StuffShow All Items Can be found by the piece on BrickLink Steel string, 1mm thick. Can be found in RC models shops. Vise, emboss (or scrap metal plate) Sand paper or file« PreviousNext »View All Steps DownloadTake in our fantastic range of designer frames including View our extensive and stylish range of




women's glasses, from the elegant to contemporary bold designs. With new styles added to our range every 3 months, you're sure to find frames that suit your look. Classic styles at affordable prices with glasses start from $39 complete with standard single vision lenses.Designer brands such Alex Perry, start from $199 for 2 pairs including standard single vision lenses. Discover Specsavers' great collection of classic, modern and stylish men's glasses. With over 1,300 frame styles available to choose from online, you'll have plenty of choice. See our wide selection of frames for men starting from $39 or 2 pairs from $149 complete with standard single vision lenses. Our great men's range of glasses includes brands such as GANT, Hackett, Jeff Banks , Tommy Hilfiger and Timberland starting from $199 for 2 pairs including standard single vision lenses. Kid's glasses come to life at Specsavers. Fun frames include the latest styles from Finding Dory, Minions, and Star Wars.




There are trendy kids' sunglasses too. What's more, all our optometrists are trained to test children's eyes and find glasses that fit them perfectly, making the whole experience easy and stress free.The perfect blend of classic style and modern performance, Rapha’s Classic Glasses are now available in a smaller, refined size, alongside new frame colours. Handmade with fine Italian acetate, choose from five frame colours including black, brown, grey, and two new colours – smoke and blonde. World-class Carl Zeiss lenses offer 100% UV protection, and a clear lens option with the black frame allows for the fitting of prescription lenses. The arms of the Classic Glasses II are reinforced with a metal core for durability, and finished with a ribbed gripper for added security. The frame and lens of the Classic Glasses II are 20% smaller than the original Classic Glasses, to suit a wider range of face shapes. A longer frame arm provides a secure fit, whether worn on top of the head or in the vents of a helmet.




The Rapha product team visited Mazzucchelli 1849 and Carl Zeiss Vision, the key component suppliers for the Rapha Classic Glasses II, to learn more about two of the most prestigious players in the eyewear industry. Due to both topography (rivers and lakes) and politico-economic heritage (Austro-Hungarian influence), the Lombardy region of northern Italy is the wealthiest and most industrialised area of the country. Just to the south of the Dolomites, those epic natural structures described by Corbusier as “les plus belles constructions du monde” reside factories producing all types of consumer goods, from shoes to cheese to helicopters. A little further out of the shadow of the Dolomites is Castiglione Olona, a commune of the province of Varese, and home to Mazzucchelli 1849 and Carl Zeiss Vision Vision, suppliers of the components for the new Rapha Classic Glasses II. Eyewear history is somewhat blurred, but it’s safe to say Europe began to ‘manufacture’ ocular aids in the 14th century.




Italian historians might have you believe eyeglasses were invented in Pisa a century earlier. But these new ‘oculars’ were, at first, only sported by literate types; so priests in Tuscany may well have popularised spectacles. As technology and literacy developed, so too did the need for magnification of written and printed communication. By the twentieth century transportation, aviation, motorsports and more outdoor ‘leisure’ activities were making further demands on the eyeballs, so protective eyewear came into play. And unsurprisingly, northern Italy, with its proximity to ski slopes, aircraft facilities and innovative industries, not to mention fashion capital Milan, became the world’s centre for eyewear and sunglasses manufacturing. Whilst they don’t work exactly in tandem, Mazzucchelli and Carl Zeiss Vision used to share the same factory buildings before what was then Sola Optical merged with the German company Carl Zeiss Vision. Zeiss, alongside producing high spec optics for eyewear here in Castiglione Olona, manufacture some of the world’s best photographic, surgical and magnification lenses.




But it’s here in Lombardy where they produce optical lenses and coatings for eyewear. In 1846 Carl Carl Zeiss Vision opened a precision mechanics and optics workshop in Jena, Germany and since then the company has invented the first anti-reflective coating, built the first surgical microscope and helped the first man on the moon take photographs of the lunarscape. They also now work in the video glasses field, conducting more boffin-optics than we’d care to mention. Carl Zeiss Vision is the industry standard for sun-lenses, so they test a lot. They offer the same optical quality as prescription lenses and often ‘exceed international standards’. They boil lenses, test them with bayer, eraser, steel wool and stick them under an accelerated weathering process. Colour consistency is tested with a spectrophotometer alongside refractive power and visual acuity. A man in a white coat in their very serene R&D laboratory says “prismatic power and precise vision is what we’re looking for”.




“Recipes are developed in the laboratory for tones and tints, and the lenses are then bathed in solutions, and sprayed or injected with particular coatings, then cleaned. Then they are tested with intense UV rays and other simulated conditions such as humidity and precipitation.” Under the UV light of their accelerated weathering machine 100 hours equates to two years of sunlight. Sunlight photons are emitted in a random manner so coatings and injections balance this. With sports lenses you generally achieve a view beyond the point of origin of the reflections for a clearer view. Lenses also increase contrast and make things seem hyper-real. And the great thing about polycarbonate and polyamide lenses is they do not shatter. And for cyclists, of course, they also keep flies out of your eyes; can they test for this? Mazzucchelli 1849 is perhaps less famous than Carl Zeiss Vision but no less prestigious… As suggested by the name the company was founded in 1849 by Santino Mazzucchelli, originally as a button making business.




As the company grew they began to manufacture combs and by the turn of the twentieth century were making a variety of consumer products from raw materials like horn, metals and shell, but also celluloid. This production of early ‘lifestyle plastics’ led to expertise in acetate manufacturing and the advent of fashionable eyewear frames. The offices of Mazzucchelli are eye-opening themselves, an example of mid-century civil architecture, juxtaposed with the 19th century yellow stucco buildings also on site. Erected in the late 1950s, the architect wished to incorporate the ‘plastic art’ of the era that Mazzucchelli made its name on. Outdoor coatings and external renders were made using polyvinyl and vacuum mouldings. Inside the building remain the plastic coatings, tile patterns and vacuum formed furnishings that were so fashionable at that time. Having formed an alliance with motor giant Fiat in the 1950s it was at this period that Franco Mazzucchelli and business partner Giorgio Orsi vowed to ‘ennoble plastics’, developing innovative ideas in fashion, art and consumer goods.




But the reason acetate is still used is not just rose tinted nostalgia, it’s one of the more beautiful man-made fibres and certainly the most eye-catching (and not just because photographic film is made from cellulose acetate). First prepared in 1865, cellulose acetate fibre is one of the earliest synthetic fibres and is based on cotton or tree pulp cellulose (“biopolymers”). It has a fantastic feeling, compared to other more ‘hard’ thermoplastics and anyone who has a semblance of a vinyl record collection will know there is something acetate has – it’s tactile, tenacious and enchanting. It is resilient too, breathes, dries quickly, and has no static cling. Then there are the patterns and aesthetics you can create with it. Deep brilliant shades, light reflections creating gorgeous effects, which is why it began to be used as a more economical alternative to horn and tortoise shell… It’s godly design, manmade yet having something of the natural, precious quality to it.

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