What Looks Good In Science Is Really Good Eyeglasses

The jawline of a square face is clearly defined, with a wide forehead and a square chin, suitable for wearing oval or circle glasses mens shapes. A square face with a large forehead, high cheekbones, and wide chin is suitable for wearing oval or rounded wide-eye frames.

The jawline of a square face is clearly defined, with a wide forehead and a square chin, suitable for wearing oval or circle glasses mens shapes. A square face with a large forehead, high cheekbones, and wide chin is suitable for wearing oval or rounded wide-eye frames.

 

People with diamond-shaped faces, narrow foreheads, and pointed chins are suitable for wearing oval or cat eye prescription glasses-shaped ones. A heart-shaped face with a wide forehead, wide cheekbones, and a pointed chin is suitable for wearing narrow or frameless clothing. A loose egg face is suitable for wearing any shape of an eye frame.

 

The idea of choosing a frame is to look good, to look good, or to look good! You wouldn't wear glasses that don't look good, no matter how comfortable they are. Good looks come first! So let's start with comfort, after all, 'what looks good in science is good'.

 

How to choose a comfortable frame, the issue of single pupil distance, what can happen if the pupil distance is not suitable, and how to avoid it, etc. Starting from facial shape, why is it easy to encounter problems when choosing frames based on facial shape? How to choose the one that suits you? And how to choose frames and frame materials for different degrees.

 

Choose a frame based on the degree, choose a comfortable frame. After you have a basic understanding of glasses, the next step is to consider how to choose a suitable and comfortable frame from the perspective of degree.

 

The choice of different degrees, firstly, the higher the degree, the thicker and heavier the lens; The larger the frame, the larger the lens, and therefore the heavier it is; If the frame is too large, the comfort effect will decrease. The higher the degree, the smaller the frame, which is limited by frameless glasses.


Pauline Yao

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