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    News — vision

    How to Choose the Best Designer Eyeglass Frames for Your Face Shape

    Designer Eyewear Can Make a Statement

    Quality reading glasses can make a difference not only in your vision, but also in the way your style and presence light up a room. The right glasses can highlight your face’s best features and add an element of sophistication, quirkiness or romanticism to your look.

    Consider these tips for choosing the best designer reading glasses:

    Determine your face shape. An angular face could appear too sharp with frames that have distinctive lines or full, plastic frames. Consider rimless or half-rimmed glasses to soften the face shape. Rounded face shapes look great with narrower frames and rectangular shapes.

    Heart shaped faces can wear a cat-eye frame really well.

    Contrast. Look for glasses that contrast with your face shape. Try softer edges for a more angular face and use angular glasses to add balance to a rounded or oval face.

    Design and color. Choose a contrasting color to make your features “pop” or a complementary color to add natural balance.

    Every face is slightly different. Try on a few pairs to find the perfect shape to complement your features. You can even download an app to try on different shapes before deciding to purchase eyeglass frames for sale online. Once you have found the colors and shapes that work, you can start to build a collection of frames based on this heuristic, and you won’t have to go through this process in as much detail the next time you need new eyewear.

    Great Style Begins with Great Looking Reading Glasses

    Our mission at I Heart Eyewear is to make our customers look great in reading glasses regardless of the occasion. Peruse our website and sort by type, shape/style, color/pattern to find the pair that’s right for you!

    15 Facts About Your Eyes that You Really Should Know (Part III)

    Designer Eyeglass Frames Provider Continues Its Health Tips Series

    15 Eye Facts You Should Know

    Here are the final five eye health awareness tips in our miniseries!

    11. Children and Eye Problems

    Because eyes change as children grow, eye tests are especially important year by year. Myopia may develop without the child or the parent noticing it, and a child who had 20/20 vision at age six may not be able to read the class whiteboard at age twelve. Farsightedness can interfere with reading a book, making reading glasses necessary. A child with astigmatism will have trouble seeing clearly both near and far. Since vision problems are often worse in one eye than the other, delaying corrective eyeglasses can result in one eye becoming dominant, while the “lazy eye” loses its ability to send a clear image to the brain. The same is true in the case of crossed eyes or a “walleye.” Children don’t outgrow these conditions, but instead lose the proper use of one eye if the problem is not corrected under the care of an ophthalmologist (see next week’s blog on the different types of eye-care specialists).

    An interesting 2012 study published in the medical journal Lancet suggests that too much time indoors can cause children to become myopic. In trying to find the reason for skyrocketing rates of myopia among children in East Asia, the researchers traced the development to an excess of indoor studying. They noted that the bright light of day is needed to induce production of the retinal transmitter dopamine, which prevents elongation of the eyeball. An elongated eyeball is myopic. The beneficial light is not ultraviolet, but full-spectrum sunlight. So here’s a new reason to encourage children to get outside and play.

    12. Cataracts Can Go Now

    A cataract is a clumping of proteins on the eye’s lens. The cataract grows slowly and leads to cloudy, discolored, or blurred vision. If it gets bad enough, the lens can be surgically removed and replaced with an artificial lens, saving the person’s eyesight. You may know someone who had cataract surgery some years ago and had to wait until the cataract had reached an advanced stage. This precaution is no longer necessary, and a cataract may now be removed as soon as it has begun to interfere with good vision. Remember that use of sunglasses is one way to help prevent cataracts.

    Bandit Men's Sunglasses

    13. Imperfect Glasses Are Better Than None at All

    You may have tried on a friend’s glasses and noticed a sort of swimmy feeling from the difference in the prescription compared to what you’re used to. A common misconception is that you need to take those glasses off quickly to avoid damaging your own eyesight. In reality, while you may develop a headache, your eyes won’t be harmed, and if you had to borrow those glasses for a while, the swimmy feeling would go away. In fact, new eyeglass wearers or people trying bifocals for the first time often take time to get used to the correction even though it is perfectly suited to their own needs.

    14. Contact Lenses Are No Cure For Myopia

    Just as eyes don’t get ruined by use of the wrong prescription, they don’t get fixed by the right one. Contrary to rumor, contact lenses won’t cause the lens to permanently change its shape or improve its ability to focus. Except in the cases mentioned above about children and “lazy eye,” eyeglasses and contacts help only as long as you’re wearing them.

    15. Visual Impairment and Learning Disabilities Aren’t Related

    Children with impaired vision may fall behind their classmates because they can’t read the board or their books. This has led to the misconception that these children have a developmental or learning disability resulting from the vision problem. However, evidence is against this supposition. While there is nothing to prevent, for example, a dyslexic person from also having myopia, the two problems are unrelated and need to be addressed separately. Any time a child struggles in school, vision, hearing, and cognition should all be assessed.

    Great Looking Reading Glasses Are Just A Click Away!

    Incorporate the health awareness tips outlined in this series to care for your eyesight. If you need quality reading glasses - or bifocal sunglasses - take a look at the selection we have to offer at http://www.ihearteyewear.com today!

    15 Facts About Your Eyes that You Really Should Know (Part II)

    Continuing our theme from our last blog post, here are five more eye-opening facts about taking care of your vision.

    eye health tips from reading glasses suppliers

    6. Irritated Eyes Need Attention

    Irritated eyes may signal an infection. Home treatment with eye drops may help a very short-term irritation, but do not ignore the problem if it continues past the first dose. Of particular concern is the use of steroid eye drops, which may relieve discomfort and redness but can mask symptoms of a problem that threatens your eyes. Be very careful, take eye discomfort seriously, and call your doctor right away.

    Pinkeye is a common eye infection that usually clears up quickly on its own or with appropriate treatment. But be aware that the disease can be bacterial or viral, and the wrong treatment can spell serious problems that damage your vision. A simple test will tell the difference and ensure you receive the proper care.

    While we are on the subject of infections, we should mention that sleeping in extended-wear contacts increases your chances of infection tenfold. Take them out before bed!

    7. Eyes That Are Not Irritated Need Consideration, Too

    Some eye diseases are not accompanied by irritation; some have no symptoms until they reach an advanced stage. A yearly exam by an ophthalmologist is necessary to screen for eye diseases, some of which, including glaucoma and macular degeneration, can blind you. A traumatic blow to your head can also result in vision loss, so if you have been injured, be alert for vision problems that suggest that you need to see a doctor. Some illnesses are associated with higher risk for eye problems. For example, hypertensive retinopathy, which occurs in people with high blood pressure, can cause blindness. This is why your eye doctor may ask you questions about your overall health.

    8. Eyeglasses Are Not Addictive

    People diagnosed with myopia or other correctable vision problems sometimes hesitate to get glasses out of a fear of becoming dependent upon eyeglasses. This is a misconception. If you need glasses, they help you see better until you take them off, and then you see just as badly as before, but not worse. This holds true for all types of corrective lenses: reading glasses, distance glasses, and glasses for astigmatism.

    9. “Don’t Look at the Sun, You’ll Go Blind!”

    You have heard this advice, and you have probably noticed that looking naked-eye toward the sun briefly, as happens in the normal course of things (admiring a sunset, or driving west in the evening), won’t blind you. This is because your pupils contract to keep most of the light out. But two ways of looking at the sun can and do cause blindness. The first is with magnification: viewing the sun through binoculars or a telescope is very dangerous, as the lens concentrates the sun’s light. Never look at the sun through a telescope without highly specialized sun filters, and be very careful with binoculars to keep your view away from the sun.

    Another sun danger is looking at a partial eclipse through an inadequate filter. People lose their sight by looking at eclipses through dark glass or other materials that seem safe because they screen much of the visible light—but they let in UV light, which you can’t see. NASA warns that sunglasses do not make eclipse viewing safe!

    Unsafe filters include color film, some non-silver black and white film, medical x-ray films with images on them, smoked glass, photographic neutral density filters, and polarizing filters. Solar filters designed to thread into eyepieces (which are often sold with inexpensive telescopes) are also dangerous.

    NASA’s website advises viewers that only #14 welding glass, and a few other specialized materials, allow safe direct viewing of the sun.

    10. Keep Your Specs Spic and Span

    The little eyeglass cloth that comes with new eyeglasses is not just handy; it is the best cloth to use. If you do not have it nearby when you need to wipe your glasses clean, by no means use a napkin or paper towel, which will scratch the coatings and potentially the lens itself. Any microfiber cloth will do a great job and avoid scratches. A drop of dish soap with warm running water also works wonders.

     

    Shop I Heart Eyewear Today for Great Looking Reading Glasses

    At I Heart Eyewear, you’ll find a great selection of eyewear at affordable prices. Most of our reading glasses are under $20, so they fit perfectly into any budget! Check out our latest eyeglass frames for men, women, and children, where you can sort by type, shape/style, and even color and pattern!

    15 Facts About Your Eyes that You Really Should Know (Part I)

    You didn't receive an owner’s manual with your eyes, but here are some things your eye doctor would like you to know to take good care of them.

    1. Your Eyes and Ultraviolet Light: The Good

    A little daily sunlight on your skin is good for your eyes. A few minutes daily of exposure to the ultraviolet (UV) light within sunlight is needed for the body to produce Vitamin D. Vitamin D protects against macular degeneration, a condition that leads to vision impairment. Your eye doctor won’t tell you to stay indoors to protect your eyes (but they will tell you to wear sunglasses)! Natural light is also the best for seeing (and reading), since our eyes have developed to respond to the spectrum in our natural environment. A pair of sun readers can prevent uncomfortable glare off the printed page if you are reading outdoors.

    1. Your Eyes and Ultraviolet Light: The Bad

    However, UV light on the eyes can indeed harm them. Exposure over the course of years can cause macular degeneration as well as cataracts, another form of vision impairment. For this reason, most eyewear comes with a UV-protective coating. A bespectacled person has better protection outdoors than a person with no glasses; your eyewear isn’t just fashionable, it’s good for your eye health! It’s important to keep in mind that small-framed glasses, whether clear or tinted, allow UV light to reach the eye from the top and sides. The American Optometric Association recommends wraparound sunglasses for those who spend much of the day outdoors. Just as good, and less well known, are contact lenses with an FDA Class 1 UV blocker. No UV light can get around these, because they cover the entire pupil and iris.

    1. Your Eyes and Nutrition

    Have you wondered why children are told to eat their carrots for better vision? It’s because carrots contain beta-carotene, a nutrient that does in fact protect against macular degeneration. Carrots are also a source of Vitamin A, which protects against night blindness. What you probably weren’t told as a child is that sweet potatoes, winter squash, spinach, and kale are even better sources of beta-carotene. Liver, eggs, and milk are also great sources for Vitamin A.

    Furthermore, the list of nutrients that are good for eye health includes:

    • Omega-3 fatty acids (think fish and walnuts)
    • Bioflavonoids (in berries and beans, for example)
    • Vitamin C lutein, zeaxanthin, selenium, zinc, Vitamin E
    • Vitamin D, as mentioned above

    The message from all of this? Eat a balanced diet with lots of unprocessed foods, and your eyes will benefit. Your visual acuity will not improve, but it will run less risk of being degraded.

    1. The Good and the Bad of Polarized Lenses

    Oh, the delight of viewing a bright day through polarized sunglasses! By removing glare, polarized lenses increase eye comfort outdoors. However, there are times when you’ll want to take off those polarized glasses and maybe put on a non-polarized pair. LCD and LED displays are often unreadable through polarized glasses. In some specific outdoor sporting situations, glare can actually help you, so polarized glasses aren’t the best choice—under some skiing conditions, for example, glare may be the telltale sign of ice, a hazard you want to see so you can steer clear.

    1. Will Reading in Dim Light Damage your Eyesight?

    How many times have you been warned not to read in dim light? This advice, as old as it is, is also false. Old eyes do often lose their visual acuity, but this happens regardless of the light the person used for reading (or sewing, or engraving miniatures on a grain of rice). You may find that your eyes are more comfortable, and that you are able to focus longer, if you use brighter light and if you wear reading glasses.

    Help Keep Your Eyes Healthy with Our Wide Selection of Eyeglass Frames!

    We’ve talked about the good, touched on the bad, but there is no ugly here! Our collection of beautiful glasses will help you take good care of your eyes. Shop www.ihearteyewear.com today to view our fashionable choices of readers, sunglasses, bifocal sunglasses, and eyewear accessories. And stay tuned for the second part of this blog to help keep your eyes in tip top shape.