Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/11/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Up until recently, both my glasses and contacts prescriptions were fine for focusing an M camera. When I got the M8, the smaller magnification made focus a little more difficult, but still quite doable. My latest prescription has changed all that. I can still focus the M8 fine in bright sunlight. But in standard room lighting and dimmer, I'm having difficulty focusing at about 2 meters and closer. The viewfinder image is slightly blurry--just enough to throw me off. The issue is the same with both glasses and contacts. All this is after I looked at my optometrist's eye chart through the M8 viewfinder with various corrections, and he adjusted my prescription accordingly. My optometrist says my eyes are healthy, I'm just near-sighted and middle-aged. :-) It seems like a single screw-in diopter correction for the M bodies is not the answer, as the viewfinder itself seems fine for 2 meters and farther, but I need something different as I get closer. A couple of solutions come to mind: 1) Progressive lenses in my glasses 2) An adjustable diopter correction for the M8 Progressive lenses might work. I guess you just hold the camera lower on your glasses for focusing on nearby objects. Since I do computer work, progressives might mean I could get by with only one pair of glasses. Now, I tried progressives about 10 years ago. I used them for about a month, but couldn't quite get used to them. I was perceiving varying barrel distortion and other weird effects like the image "following sligthtly behind" as I turned my head from side to side, and it drove me nuts. I much preferred ordinary bifocals, so I ended up with them, plus a additional single vision pair of glasses for computer work. Maybe now that I've had the experience of adjusting to monovision contacts, I might be more adaptable(?) The Megaperls magnifiers have an adjustable diopter correction. Their 1.15x magnifier would bring the M8 image up from .68x to .78x, and I could probably just leve it on the camera for lenses from 28mm to 90mm. It would give me a diopter adjustment I could tweak between near and far. This would work with contacts as well as glasses. So, calling all middle-aged dudes and dude-ettes with M cameras! How have you coped with creeping presbyopia? Have you tried progressive lenses, and how do they work for you, both with M cameras, and in real life? Have you adjusted well to them? Do you get a stiff neck from pitching your head up and down to "focus," or is it pretty natural after a while? And does anyone have experience with the Megaperls magnifiers? How usable are they with glasses, and is the diopter adjustment useful for dealing with near vs. far focusing? Thanks, all! --Peter