Chirpy wrote:
>
> Update: One of my replacement pairs arrived. I am not sure yet if the
> prescript is right, will have to keep testing them. While I can see
> better with these than with no glasses at all, there is something that
> just doesn't seem quite right. I don't know if I'm experiencing slight
> dizziness and minor eye pain due to an oncoming migraine or if these
> glasses are just wrong. Also, I'm concerned that when I look only
> through the left lens, which is to correct a minor astigmatism (sp?),
> I do not have fully corrected sight. Will let you know how this turns
> out.

Your optometrist or ophthalmologist can tell you whether your glasses
correspond to your prescription.  That does not mean you'll
necessarily like your quality of vision with them.

My experience from having bought many, many pairs of strong eyeglasses
for more than 30 years is that seemingly insignificant changes (like a
different index lens material or a different base curve) can make a
large difference in the subjective experience of wearing the
glasses.

What can be measured is how much detail you can resolve with your
lenses, not how comfortable or natural the glasses feel to you.  It's
up to the optical provider to come up with lens performance that can
be measured.  It's up to you to find something you are comfortable
with.

I am willing to compromise in some areas to get benefits in others.
For instance, I find I get "best" visual quality with 1.5ish index
crown glass lenses that have a nearly flat base curve.  But if I use
such lenses with my strong prescription, I get shockingly heavy
glasses that are so unsightly I can't stand to see myself wearing
them, and a narrow field of vision to boot.  So I compromise and use
1.67 or higher index plastic lenses in frames with some wraparound
that require a higher base curve.  This gives me slightly lower visual
acuity and more damage-prone lens surfaces, but better peripheral
vision and lighter, more attractive glasses.

I have moderate astigmatism in one eye (-2.75 diopters) and strong
astigmatism in the other (-4.25).  In my observation, it is not
possible to completely correct for astigmatism.  You do the best you
can and take the most effective correction you can get.

My last two pairs of glasses were from Zenni Optical, and I'm quite
happy with them.  The frames are better than the average of what I
have bought for stunning amounts of money in the past, and the
prescriptions seem accurate.  I had to do minor fit adjustments on my
new glasses, just like my optician would have (and like I have learned
to do for myself over the years).

I got frame #3161 for my daily wear glasses and #2227 for my
sunglasses.  Neither of them have any deficiencies I can identify, and
I am pretty picky about this stuff.  In either case, I would have had
to pay six to ten times as much to get the same glasses locally.

I will be doing business with Zenni again, with a due amount of
caution and reasonable expectations of course.

Chalo

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