New Glasses Require Piercing Bridge of Nose
Technovelgy.com Mon May 22, 12:00 PM ET
James Sooy and Oliver Gibson have come up with Pierced Glasses - the most minimalist eyewear since the Pince-nez glasses that clip onto your nose was invented in the 1840's.
Here's the step-by-step:
For those who think that Pierced Glasses are dangerous or crazy, listen to what the creators say about other surgical alternatives to glasses: "Paying ... to have someone cut your eyes and shoot a laser in them (just so you don’t have to wear glasses) seems extreme to me…"
My favorite extreme eyewear from science fiction are Molly's surgically inset glasses from William Gibson's 1984 novel Neuromancer. The glasses consisted of the lenses only, which were implanted so as to seal off her eye sockets completely. Her tearducts were rerouted to empty into her throat, as I recall.
Sfnal eyewear enthusiasts should take a look at these real-life examples:
(This Science Fiction in the News story used with permission from Technovelgy.com - where science meets fiction.)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/200605...ngbridgeofnose
James Sooy and Oliver Gibson have come up with Pierced Glasses - the most minimalist eyewear since the Pince-nez glasses that clip onto your nose was invented in the 1840's.
Here's the step-by-step:
- Get pierced - an internally-threaded barbell that goes through the skin above the bridge of your nose
- Use a tabletop mill to cut the L-shaped metal pieces that screw onto the barbell
- Attach rare earth magnets to the glasses; these hold the glasses on.
- Don't get rid of the bridge pieces; they let the lenses sit on your nose and take the actual weight of the lenses.
For those who think that Pierced Glasses are dangerous or crazy, listen to what the creators say about other surgical alternatives to glasses: "Paying ... to have someone cut your eyes and shoot a laser in them (just so you don’t have to wear glasses) seems extreme to me…"
My favorite extreme eyewear from science fiction are Molly's surgically inset glasses from William Gibson's 1984 novel Neuromancer. The glasses consisted of the lenses only, which were implanted so as to seal off her eye sockets completely. Her tearducts were rerouted to empty into her throat, as I recall.
Sfnal eyewear enthusiasts should take a look at these real-life examples:
- JewelEye - Innovative Eyeball Piercing (The comments for this one were all over the map)
- Virtual Retinal Displays Get All Geordi With It
- The Blind May See - In The Dark
(This Science Fiction in the News story used with permission from Technovelgy.com - where science meets fiction.)
- How the Human Eye Works
- First Picture of Living Human Retina Reveals Surprise
- Why We Blink Without Noticing
http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/200605...ngbridgeofnose




