Re: [lace] Importance of Myopia for lacemaking

2022-04-01 Thread lynrbailey
Dear Joepie and Devon,
I am so very glad you brought this subject to everyone's attention.  I have
worn glasses since I was 9.  My minus is about 6.5, for those who know, or,
my 20/20 without glasses is about 7 inches from my eyes.  This is an
advantage for lacemaking, as when my bifocals don't work, I can take off my
glasses, bend down, and see my lace.  But my father's family has cataracts,
so I've been worried.  This solution is a great relief!   I will be paying
attention to any future messages. 
 
Lyn from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, currently in Key Largo, Florida since
January, where the weather is sultry, but the sun has shined every day except
about 3 since January, and I've been in shorts and sandals since we got here.
 
"My email sends out an automatic message. Arachne members,
please ignore it. I read your emails."

J-D Hammet wrote:
I had cataracts removed in both eyes about 2.5 years ago. I opted to get
the best lenses I could which were expensive but amazing. They cover the
distances from middle-near to distant. I have myopia like Devon and had worn
either glasses or contact lenses from the age of eight.
 
One eye was done on the Thursday of the first week and the second 8 days
later. It was wonderful as for the first time since I was 8 Icould see
without
glasses or contact lenses. I found I could do most laces, except for the very
finest. Therefore, I had some lenses made for an frame I already had, by the
optician just for that fine work. So far it has served me well, though I must
say that I am thinking of having some glasses made for the really far
distance
(for wild life observation).
 
I would say go for the best and most up to date multi-focal lenses you can
afford, especially ones that correct the astygmatism as well as I did. If you
wish to retain the advantage of myopia (which would certainly help with lace
making) opt for the mid- to far distance lenses.
 
Hope that your operations go as well as mine did! I have not looked back
since
then.
 
Devon Thein wrote:
I have been told that I should have cataract surgery. There are many options
in cataract surgery and I don�t know that I understand them all. According
to the doctor, I can have the inexpensive and largely insurance subsidized
surgery in which I will have �basic� lenses implanted in my eye. (These
are eerily called IOLs) The basic should return my eye to where it was
pre-cataract. The alternative costs more, but would involve implanting a
highly specialized lens in my eye that would address my astigmatism and it
might even be possible to go glasses free afterward as I have not done since
age 7.
 
I now think the problem was the cataracts. If my vision were returned to what
it was before (basic lenses) I would be happy to have my same close vision
that I am used to. My lifestyle wouldn�t change. I would still wear
startling
red glasses as part of my style identity.
 
I mentioned this to the doctor and he said that in the more expensive,
multi-focus lenses he could put the focus anywhere I wanted, and I could have
it rather close up and I would still wear glasses for long distance vision.
 
Admittedly, I am somewhat intrigued by the idea of not feeling around for my
glasses everyday. They don�t fit too well over a K95 mask. So, a lens that
does well at all distances has a certain appeal. I don�t even know if I
want
him to put the focus in close quarters. After all, it is supposed to be good
close-up.
 
The more expensive surgery also is more likely to have issues since you have
to seat the lens in exactly the correct position. However, the claim is that
it doesn�t happen that often.
 
In both cases the surgery takes 20 minutes.
 
Has anyone had cataract surgery? How has it affected your lacemaking? What
choices did you make and are you happy with them? It would really be
devastating to impair my lacemaking at this stage of my life. It is a little
too late to find a hobby that requires good distance vision.
 

 

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Re: [lace] Importance of Myopia for lacemaking

2022-04-01 Thread J-D Hammett
Hi Devon and other Arachnids,

Firstly apologies for not cutting Devon's message or all the Arachne info, but
I am on my phone and do not know how to do that.

   I had cataracts removed in both eyes about 2.5 years ago. I opted to get
the best lenses I could which were expensive but amazing. They cover the
distances from middle-near to distant. I have myopia like Devon and had worn
either glasses or contact lenses from the age of eight.

   One eye was done on the Thursday of the first week and the second 8 days
later. It was wonderful as for the first time since I was 8 Icould see without
glasses or contact lenses. I found I could do most laces, except for the very
finest. Therefore, I had some lenses made for an frame I already had, by the
optician just for that fine work. So far it has served me well, though I must
say that I am thinking of having some glasses made for the really far distance
(for wild life observation).

   I would say go for the best and most up to date multi-focal lenses you can
afford, especially ones that correct the astygmatism as well as I did. If you
wish to retain the advantage of myopia (which would certainly help with lace
making) opt for the mid- to far distance lenses.

Hope that your operations go as well as mine did! I have not looked back since
then.

Happy lace making,

Joepie, in East Sussex, UK where we had snow and hail today.




Gentle Spiders,

I have been told that I should have cataract surgery. There are many options
in cataract surgery and I don’t know that I understand them all. According
to the doctor, I can have the inexpensive and largely insurance subsidized
surgery in which I will have “basic” lenses implanted in my eye. (These
are eerily called IOLs) The basic should return my eye to where it was
pre-cataract. The alternative costs more, but would involve implanting a
highly specialized lens in my eye that would address my astigmatism and it
might even be possible to go glasses free afterward as I have not done since
age 7.  <,...>

 I now think the problem was the cataracts. If my vision were returned to what
it was before (basic lenses) I would be happy to have my same close vision
that I am used to. My lifestyle wouldn’t change. I would still wear startling
red glasses as part of my style identity.

I mentioned this to the doctor and he said that in the more expensive,
multi-focus lenses he could put the focus anywhere I wanted, and I could have
it rather close up and I would still wear glasses for long distance vision.

Admittedly, I am somewhat intrigued by the idea of not feeling around for my
glasses everyday. They don’t fit too well over a K95 mask. So, a lens that
does well at all distances has a certain appeal. I don’t even know if I want
him to put the focus in close quarters. After all, it is supposed to be good
close-up.

The more expensive surgery also is more likely to have issues since you have
to seat the lens in exactly the correct position. However, the claim is that
it doesn’t happen that often.

In both cases the surgery takes 20 minutes.

Has anyone had cataract surgery? How has it affected your lacemaking? What
choices did you make and are you happy with them? It would really be
devastating to impair my lacemaking at this stage of my life. It is a little
too late to find a hobby that requires good distance vision.

Blindly,
Devon.

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Re: [lace] Importance of Myopia for lacemaking

2022-04-01 Thread N.A. Neff
Hi Devon,

I've had cataract surgery in both eyes. I chose to get implanted lenses
that corrected my distance vision so I could still drive (to the
optician's, for example) if I broke my glasses, so I wear glasses for close
work; this logic makes distance vision without glasses a no-brainer for me.
I have a pair of bifocals that are close vision at the bottom and
correction for computer-distance at the top. I don't like trifocals. It
hasn't affected my lacemaking except that things are not as blurry. I think
your aversion to the beige card was indeed caused by the cataracts.

My understanding is that your situation would be complicated by the
astigmatism. Correction of that via an implanted lens requires a lens that
is weighted so it sits at exactly the correct angle in the eye to correct
the astigmatism. Everything involved in correcting for astigmatism via
the implanted lens makes that lens much more expensive, and riskier in that
if the lens is the slightest bit off, you're back to being astigmatic.
Perhaps someone can chime in who has had the correction for astigmatism.

The reason the surgery only takes 20 minutes in either case is that all the
corrections are done when the lens is manufactured; the surgery is just
slipping the natural lens out of the clear envelope that holds it in place,
and replacing it with the tailored lens -- the same procedure for all
configurations.

HTH
Nancy

On Fri, Apr 1, 2022 at 4:32 PM DevonThein  wrote:

> ...
> Has anyone had cataract surgery? How has it affected your lacemaking? What
> choices did you make and are you happy with them?
> ...

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[lace] Importance of Myopia for lacemaking

2022-04-01 Thread DevonThein
Gentle Spiders,

I have been told that I should have cataract surgery. There are many options
in cataract surgery and I don’t know that I understand them all. According
to the doctor, I can have the inexpensive and largely insurance subsidized
surgery in which I will have “basic” lenses implanted in my eye. (These
are eerily called IOLs) The basic should return my eye to where it was
pre-cataract. The alternative costs more, but would involve implanting a
highly specialized lens in my eye that would address my astigmatism and it
might even be possible to go glasses free afterward as I have not done since
age 7. Supposedly the lens would run the gamut between seeing well at long
distance, intermediate and close up. The general preference, it would seem is
for people who wish to see distance, over close-up.

I have always had very good close vision, myopia, and it has quite likely
influenced my choice of lacemaking as a hobby. In fact, lately, I have noticed
that my close vision is not as good as it was, leading me to unfairly
criticize the choice of beige pricking card in two recent classes. I now think
the problem was the cataracts. If my vision were returned to what it was
before (basic lenses) I would be happy to have my same close vision that I am
used to. My lifestyle wouldn’t change. I would still wear startling red
glasses as part of my style identity.

I mentioned this to the doctor and he said that in the more expensive,
multi-focus lenses he could put the focus anywhere I wanted, and I could have
it rather close up and I would still wear glasses for long distance vision.

Admittedly, I am somewhat intrigued by the idea of not feeling around for my
glasses everyday. They don’t fit too well over a K95 mask. So, a lens that
does well at all distances has a certain appeal. I don’t even know if I want
him to put the focus in close quarters. After all, it is supposed to be good
close-up.

The more expensive surgery also is more likely to have issues since you have
to seat the lens in exactly the correct position. However, the claim is that
it doesn’t happen that often.

In both cases the surgery takes 20 minutes.

Has anyone had cataract surgery? How has it affected your lacemaking? What
choices did you make and are you happy with them? It would really be
devastating to impair my lacemaking at this stage of my life. It is a little
too late to find a hobby that requires good distance vision.

Blindly,
Devon

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