Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/06/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ben Holmes wrote: <snip> Yesterday a man with a diploma told me I needed eyeglasses. I swallowed hard and agreed. Today I picked up a new pair which were ground to my needs, and I must say I am amazed! <snip> I'm glad your seeing well. As an optometrist (one of those with a diploma), I'm usually the person most people visit to improve their vision. When I opened my practice 16 years ago, I had a twenty year old return a week after picking up his new glasses. Just opening my practice, I sometimes expected the worse when a patient returned - with a possible complaint the glasses "weren't right" or a lens fell out or something. Well, he described to me that he was able to see leaves on trees, blades of grass and more vibrant colors. Boy did I feel great after that visit. The visual system does the best it can with the images that are presented to it. Each eye has over 1 million nerve fibers feeding information to the back of your brain - where a significant portion is dedicated to visual processing. The iris is able to change the pupil size very quickly to adapt to changing light levels and even more significant is that the retina itself can change its sensivitity levels over many minutes to optimize vision. A great example is viewing at night. When there is not enough illumination, most images are simply grey. After 20 minutes of darl adaptation, detail is enhanced and vision is more acute for low light use. Spectacles are very useful and I strongly recommend a clear UV blocker and super anti-reflective coating for the lenses. UV can cause problems over many years for the eyes. See what it does to your skin after 40 years. If you don't think your exposed skin has changed from exposure to sunlight, stand in front of a mirror, turn your head and look at the skin of your rear end (no kidding). It most closely resembles the skin you were born with. Now look at your arms, back of your hands or facial skin. Not the same. Multiple layer anti-reflective coatings have come along way to reduce reflections on spectacle lenses. Europe and Japan are ahead of the the U.S. with people using AR coatings almost routinely. We have the technology here in the U.S. but most people aren' aware of this option. Clean your lenses well - like a good Leica lens and they'll last you two years or more. You should be re-examined by then anyway. Finally, progressive addition lenses (invisible bifocals) are very useful for the over forty crowd. And believe it or not, Zeiss makes one of the best in the business. It is called the Zeiss Gradal progressive lens. The French (Esslior Corporation) make a very good lens called the Varliux Comfort and actually invented this concept over twenty years ago. Too bad Leica doesn't make lenses for glasses or contact lenses for that matter - but they sure make good cameras and lenses. I think as Leica begins to grow over the next few years, we are going to see a proliferation of new bodies and lenses. Apo for all telephoto lenses and Aspheric designs for most other short focal length lenses. This may very be the begining of a golden age of optics from Leica. Happy shooting, Richard - ----------------------------------------- Richard Clompus, OD West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA