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Wearing sunglasses under direct sunlight: Large lenses offer good protection, but broad temple arms are also needed against "stray light" from the sides. Sunglasses or sun glasses (informally called shades or sunnies ; more names below ) are a form of protective eyewear designed primarily to prevent bright sunlight and high-energy visible light ...
Skull temples: bend down behind the ears, follow the contour of the skull and rest evenly against the skull; Library temples: generally straight and do not bend down behind the ears. Hold the glasses primarily through light pressure against the side of the skull; Convertible temples: used either as library or skull temples depending on the bent
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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. [6] [7] [8]
A common form of the pose has the arms straight out along the ground towards the feet, the arms straight with the fingers interlocked. [3] Some practitioners are able to straighten the legs in the pose. [1] Eka Pada Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (One-legged Bridge) has one leg raised vertically. [3]
There are two Hasta Vinyasas for shoulder rotation: One is a back bend with hands over the head, followed by a simultaneous return to standing, and movement of the arms toward the front. The other is an arm movement lowering the arms and from above the head, and then opening horizontally to the sides. [18]
Upavishthakonasana or "wide-angle seated forward bend" [20] has both legs straight along the ground, as wide apart as possible, with the chin and nose touching the ground. [13] [14] [29] [30] Parsva Upavishthakonasana (to the side) has the body facing one leg, and the hands both grasping the foot of that leg, without raising the opposite hip. [31]