The Wild Ewt of the Plains of Canada ([personal profile] ewt) wrote2006-05-15 03:23 pm

My eyes are dim, I cannot see...

Vision Express want an awful lot of money for high-density lenses. Like £251 for the 50% thinner ones, and £146 for the 30% thinner ones. I paid £120 total for my last pair (but, the frames broke after 9 months, and have again broken after 9 months, and getting new ones means waiting for them to order in the frames, which is not fast).

They also weren't very nice to me. The actual optician was lovely, but the sales monkey was pissed off when I told him I couldn't afford to spend more than £300 in total on glasses. (Please, not to scold me about mismanaging my buffer and overspending and all the rest - I assure you I am scolding myself enough. I still have to deal with the reality at hand). Then he showed me where the cheaper frames were and I started over, since the only ones that he'd brought me that even remotely suit me were £159 and would only be suitble for the thinnerestest lenses, bringing the total to £410. They do a student discount but that still brings the total to £350. I brought some of the cheaper ones back to the table to try and he left me sitting there while he went to deal with another customer. It took me three tries to get his attention so I could pay for the eye test and leave, and I was close to tears by then. So, I won't be shopping there, even though it is fast and the shop is all shiny and white and futuristic.

Another place in Canary Wharf was similarly expensive, slightly more for the lenses in fact, but empty and they were nicer to me, although they kept asking me whether I work in Canary Wharf even though I'd just asked about a student discount.

ASDA do 45% thnner lenses for £110, and 35% thinner lenses for £50. Their selection of frames is limited (although I couldn't really see very well), and I'll have to wait 7-10 business days to get my glasses after they've been ordered, which is a long time - up to two weeks. But the lady there was extremely helpful. She went around with my broken glasses trying to find frames similar enough that I could just get the frames and pop the old lenses in; no joy there unfortunately, so then she did the incredibly fiddly job of taping them. I tried that this morning and utterly failed. She must have magic fingers. The glasses are still quite wobbly - I shall not be wearing them for Aikido - and the lens angles aren't quite right so I'm getting a weird sort of headache, but at least I can see. And they treated me like a human being, which is always nice.

I'm hard up against the old good/cheap/fast problem, where you can have any two. I need fast, because not being able to see is not an option, nor is walking around with a headache for two weeks. I would, of course, prefer good, and the reason I'm not going back to Specsavers is that they have given me two duff frames in a row and they forgot the scratchproof coating on one lens of my existing glasses. But I didn't realise that £300 was cheap for glasses.

No, I'm not getting ordinary thickness lenses. They'll look like fucking cokebottles on me; my prescription is -6.5 (apparently - I thought it was -6.75) in my right eye. I have to wear these things all day every day, and I feel ugly enough as it is.

All the GRAH.

I am grateful that I can see. I am grateful that my visual problems are limited to myopia and astigmatism. I am grateful that I have my pinhole glasses, and that customer service in this country does exist (even if you have to go to 3 shops to get it). I am grateful that [livejournal.com profile] hairyears prodded me until I made an eye appointment.

[identity profile] mstevens.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 02:49 pm (UTC)(link)
It probably helps taping up glasses if you can see what you're doing.

[identity profile] rillaith.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Try Glassesdirect.co.uk. They may not fast enough, but they're easily the cheapest you'll find, and you'dve already got a copy of your prescription. You can also upload a photo to "try on" the frames available.

Can't hurt to look - even if only to be armed in preparation for next time.

[identity profile] caradea.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 03:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I was going to suggest that too. Even with all the added on extras, they could not possibly come up to £300/pair from that website.

[identity profile] ewtikins.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm interested in getting some spare glasses from there, but I'm really wary of ordering something online which I then have to wear all day every day for a few years. I don't have a photo without glasses that's recent enough to do the upload thing, blah blah blah.

Basically if it's going to take that long I'll go to ASDA.

[identity profile] caradea.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Well. since ASDA are owned by Walmart and a few years ago I got glasses from them(walmart) that were *extremely* off as far as the prescription... The astigmatism was out by a whole 10degrees and the lense shape was such that you couldn't rotate it to correct it at all so I had to go back to them after having the mistake confirmed at my eye doctor's lab to yell at them, give them back, wait another few weeks, etc.

Not saying that no one else can make the same mistake but I'm just wary of them and anyone related to them.

[identity profile] 7leaguebootdisk.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I have the invunerable titinium frames, they have survied a lot. You can break the ear pieces, and perhaps the nose piece, but the frame is springy and very tough.

[identity profile] mubeimmik.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 06:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I ended up splurging and getting titanium frames myself, and they're fantastic. Really light-weight too. That being said, I still didn't pay more than 250 USD for mine, with the thinner anti-glare lenses!

[identity profile] sunflowerinrain.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 04:10 pm (UTC)(link)
It's such an important decision. Worse than ballgowns and almost as bad as minor surgery (although at least you aren't stuck with the results forever).

I've had duff glasses from Specsavers twice. Boots weren't much better. Several friends say Asda is very good, but I'm reluctant because they are in Walmart. Dolland & Aitcheson were good but cost more. Small family-type opticians are the best but expensive because they can't do the deals. I don't know anyone who has used Glassesdirect, but it looks like a good plan for spares.
I may stifle my protesting consumerconscience and go to Asda.
karen2205: Me with proper sized mug of coffee (Default)

[personal profile] karen2205 2006-05-15 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Glasses should not cost £300. I spent £136.50 on two pairs of glasses at the weekend. I used Specsavers and took advantage of their 2 for 1 offer on £75 frames. Not suggesting you go back to Specsavers given that you've had problems with them, just that you should be able to get glasses that won't break for a more sensible sum than £300, even with needing extra thin lenses (my prescription is -1.50 at its worst).

(Anonymous) 2006-05-15 04:21 pm (UTC)(link)
How can I help?
Mum

[identity profile] feanelwa.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 07:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Go you for not going back to Vision Express, what a bastard. Have no other useful advice though.

[identity profile] pfy.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
*comforts*

I would kind of recommend going back to where you got them and LARTing the nearest salesdroid until they give you new frames. Having two pairs last less than a year each is crap, quite frankly.

I also think that metal frames might be a good plan.

Cheap glasses off Teh Intarweb also sound good, even if they're only as a spare pair.

I could lend you some money or something if it would help.

[identity profile] mupstasia.livejournal.com 2006-05-15 08:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Good seeing you and b-movie the other night. I too am having glasses issues (can't wear my contacts as much as I used to) as mine are 5 or 6 years old and the coating is coming off and scratching. Was going to go Specsavers after a quote at the Institute of Optometry (near my work) was £150 just for the lenses. But maybe I should go for the quality option. Would like to get some prescription sunglasses too though, which makes the Specsaver 2 for 1 option sound better.

[identity profile] ksta.livejournal.com 2006-05-16 10:17 am (UTC)(link)
i am surprised that they cost *that* much, mine are about -6 with astigmatism also, and about each year i have get a new pair for about 120.

[identity profile] ksta.livejournal.com 2006-05-16 10:17 am (UTC)(link)
also, have you heard of glasses being sold online? apparently there is a super cheap place somewhere, and although it may be more than their advertised 20 quid, it is unlikely to bne 300