enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Transitions Optical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transitions_Optical

    Transitions Optical is a U.S.-based company known for manufacturing photochromic lenses, which darken on exposure to specific types of light. The company was founded in 1990. [1] In 1991, Transitions Optical became the first company to commercialize and manufacture plastic photochromic lenses. [2]

  3. History of optics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_optics

    Optics began with the development of lenses by the ancient Egyptians and Mesopotamians, followed by theories on light and vision developed by ancient Greek philosophers, and the development of geometrical optics in the Greco-Roman world. The word optics is derived from the Greek term τα ὀπτικά meaning 'appearance, look'. [1]

  4. Eyewear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewear

    The first incarnations of glasses were made with the aim of providing aid to reading. [ 8 ] Though innovations in pre-modern eyewear technology occurred in both Imperial China and the Inuit territories, which both invented early forms of sunglasses and goggles, [ 9 ] Venice and Northern Italy have historically been the place of consolidation ...

  5. Glasses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasses

    Man with glasses. A woman with glasses. Glasses, also known as eyeglasses or spectacles, are vision eyewear with clear or tinted lenses mounted in a frame that holds them in front of a person's eyes, typically utilizing a bridge over the nose and hinged arms, known as temples or temple pieces, that rest over the ears for support.

  6. Bifocals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bifocals

    A method for fusing the sections of the lenses together was developed by Louis de Wecker at the end of the 19th century and patented by John Louis Borsch Jr. (1873–1929) [9] in 1908. In 1915, Henri (Henry) A. Courmettes (1884-1969), a French immigrant to the US, patented the “Flat Top” (or “D Segment”) reading portion of the bifocal ...

  7. Ballistic eyewear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistic_eyewear

    Ballistic eyewear is a form of glasses or goggles that protect from small projectiles and fragments. For the U.S. military, choices are listed on the Authorized Protective Eyewear List (APEL). [ 1 ] Ballistic eyewear including examples that meet APEL requirements are commercially available for anyone who wishes to buy it.

  8. Photochromic lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photochromic_lens

    A photochromic eyeglass lens, part of the lens darkened after exposure to sunlight while the other part remained covered. A photochromic lens is an optical lens that darkens on exposure to light of sufficiently high frequency, most commonly ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

  9. American Optical Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Optical_Company

    The AN6531 Comfort Cable aviator sunglasses frame kept being issued by the U.S. military as No. MIL-G-6250 glasses after World War II with different lenses as Type F-2 (arctic) and Type G-2 aviator sunglasses but fitted with darker lenses until their substitute, the Type HGU-4/P aviator sunglasses, became available in the late 1950s. [14] [15] [16]