Distance or Near
Single Vision Lenses
Single vision lenses are the right call if you’re nearsighted or farsighted (but not both). They also handle astigmatism, if that’s part of your situation. Not sure if you need them? Take a peek at your prescription. If the ADD column is blank, bingo. You’re in the right place.
Distance, near and Intermediate
Progressive Lenses
Progressives do it all — near, intermediate, and distance — in one lens. (They’re sometimes prescribed to correct astigmatism, too.) Heads up: if you've never worn them before, give yourself about a week to adjust. That’s totally normal. The payoff is not having to swap glasses every time your eyes shift focus. Spend a lot of time staring at a screen or doing fine-detail work? A second pair of glasses with single vision lenses is a handy sidekick.
Premium progressive lenses offer an even wider field of vision and help most people adjust faster.
Sunglasses or Fashion Glasses
Non-Prescription Lenses
Maybe your sunglasses took a tumble off the dashboard. Or your blue light glasses lost a fight with your dog (or toddler). Whatever happened, we can swap in fresh non-Rx lenses and get your favorite frames back in rotation.
distance & near with line
bifocal lenses
Bifocals (sometimes called multifocal lenses) correct both near and distance vision in one lens. There’s a visible line between the two zones, so your eyes know where to look for what. They can handle astigmatism, too. If you have a little trouble changing focus, bifocals can help. They're often a better pick than progressives if you do a lot of reading or computer work, since the lens is wider.
Distance, intermediate & near with line
Trifocal lenses
Trifocals are bifocals' overachieving cousin. Same idea — visible lines dividing the lens into focal zones — except there are three zones instead of two: distance, intermediate, and near. And like bifocals, they can also help with astigmatism. Trifocals tend to show up in jobs that demand all three focal distances at once, like flying a plane.